Comes The Inquisitor *Series*(AU,TEEN) Complete - 9/23

Finished stories set in an alternate universe to that introduced in the show, or which alter events from the show significantly, but which include the Roswell characters. Aliens play a role in these fics. All complete stories on the main AU with Aliens board will eventually be moved here.

Moderators: Anniepoo98, Rowedog, ISLANDGIRL5, Itzstacie, truelovepooh, FSU/MSW-94, Hunter, Island Breeze, Forum Moderators

User avatar
Kathy W
Obsessed Roswellian
Posts: 690
Joined: Thu Oct 31, 2002 5:06 am

Post by Kathy W »

Hello and thank you to everyone reading! :)

Misha: I forgot to mention last time that your comments about not being able to have the "it" discussion in Spanish were really interesting. How would similar derogatory remarks be made in Spanish? Would you use a word for "thing", or "object", or "animal", or something like that?




CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT


August 9, 1947, 2:00 p.m.

Proctor residence




"Open it!"

Anthony's face was shining as he handed Dee his present; he was so excited he was practically panting like a puppy. Dee accepted the package with a smile, once again feeling the power cord just under the bright wrapping paper. All around lay the considerable litter of paper from her other gifts—all her other gifts, because Anthony had insisted she open his last, saying something about having to take it down in the basement after it was opened.

The two dozen or so partygoers leaned forward in expectation. There had already been a good deal of excitement over two of the gifts. The first was Rachel's kitten, a tiny, striped grey tabby now being passed from hand to hand so often that its four little paws had yet to touch the floor. Thank goodness it didn't seem to be the type of cat who liked to hide under the bed. And then there was Mac's gift, which initially had left everyone puzzled.

"A hammer?" Mary Laura had asked quizzically, peering over everyone else's heads to see inside the just-opened box.

"A saw?" Peter had said, with unmistakable envy. The tools were brand new and shiny, and made no sense until Mac explained.

"You've always wanted a tree house," he piped up from behind the children. "I was going to just build you one, but I figured you'd like to help. Pick your tree, and I'll teach you how to draw plans and build it."

"Oh, Mac," Dee had said, plopping the box down on the sofa beside her, where it was instantly set upon by every boy in the room, and running to give Mac a crushing hug. "Thank you! That's wonderful! We can spend the rest of the summer doing that!"

"It'll take longer than that," Mac warned. "Probably into fall. It'll be a big job. But," he whispered in her ear so only she could hear, "I thought you might need something to take your mind off….everything that's been going on."

Good idea, Dee had thought, hugging him again. Every time she tried to put "everything" out of her mind, something like Deputy Valenti showing up would happen. Valenti had left without any apparent problem, but her Mama wouldn't say what he'd wanted. "Never you mind," Emily had said, steering Dee back to her party. "Just enjoy your party and leave him to us."

"Which tree are you going to pick?" Rachel had asked, with a doubtful glance toward the tools. The girls would love the tree house, but probably none of them wanted to actually help build it. The boys, on the other hand, were practically drooling. And Anthony had smiled broadly, no doubt thinking exactly what she was thinking: Once her tree house was finished, they could use the same plans to build one in that wonderful tree in his backyard with the stout branch which led right to his window. Unfortunately, Ernie Hutton, who had behaved himself with effort for the rest of the party, intercepted that look and went to town with it.

"Awww, DeeDee and Anthony are gonna make the tree house!" he singsonged, as every head turned his way. "Anthony and DeeDee, sittin' in a tree! K-I-S-S-I-N-G! First comes love, then comes ouch!"

"That will be quite enough, young man," Emily had said firmly, with a death grip on his shoulder. "Behave." And Ernie had sunk into a sullen silence, contenting himself with making smooching motions behind everyone's backs.

Now Dee carefully unwrapped Anthony's present, taking her time with it. It was the last of the vast pile, and she wanted to make it last as long as possible. Her audience, however, didn't share that perception. They hovered over her, clucking impatiently until the paper finally fell away to reveal an odd pair of objects: A large wooden bowl, painted black and studded with holes, and what looked like the base of a lamp, with a bulb and a cord, but no cover for the bulb. Everyone stared in silence for several seconds before Anthony answered the question in everyone's mind.

"It's a planetarium."

When this announcement was met with confused silence, he elaborated, "You turn on the light, and the light shines through the holes in the bowl onto the ceiling and makes the patterns of the constellations."

"Neat!" Dee exclaimed. "Now I see why it goes in the basement. Let's go!"

She hopped off the couch and made a beeline for the basement door, Anthony and the rest of the partygoers close behind. Once downstairs, Dee turned on the one bare bulb overhead, pulled a small table into the middle of the room, set the planetarium in the middle of it, and snaked the cord toward an outlet. Everyone assembled around the table, some casting nervous glances around the dark basement as Anthony reached for the bulb on the ceiling.

"Plug it in, and then I'll turn this off," he told her. "Everybody look at the ceiling!" Dee inserted the plug, the light bulb under the black bowl glowed, and Anthony turned off the ceiling bulb.

Suddenly there was a sharp *pop*, a sizzling sound, and the basement was plunged into darkness. Mary Laura gave a muffled scream, and Emily could be heard over the excited babble of voices. "Calm down, everyone. I'm going to turn the light on."

The light flicked on, making everyone blink. Anthony's face was stricken as he inspected his present, the others crowding around. The light bulb had shattered, and the socket was blackened.

"Let me get another bulb," Emily suggested, skipping up the stairs behind them.

"It looks like the whole socket blew," Anthony said despondently. "Maybe it was the wrong voltage or something. It was really pretty when I tested it," he added wistfully.

"Neat, Evans," a sarcastic voice said from the back of the crowd. "We all came down here to watch you blow up the stars!"

Ernie Hutton tittered at his own joke, and several of the children smiled in spite of themselves. Never one to neglect an audience, Ernie seized the moment. "I know!" he said excitedly. "It was the aliens who did it! I bet you've got their home planet on that doohickey, and they didn't want all of us to know!"

More laughing. Anthony was too crestfallen over his failed gift to spit back.

<Such a disagreeable child,> commented a voice in Dee's head.

<Tell me about it,> Dee grumbled silently, scowling at Ernie. <Now do you see why I said he was an idiot?>

<I never disputed your diagnosis.>

"Don't let Evans anywhere near the sun!" Ernie was chortling. "He'll blow that up too!" More laughter. "Hey, maybe that was the 'spaceship' out on the ranch. It was Evans blowing something up!"

<Don't,> warned the voice in Dee's head as her hands began to twitch. <I am not familiar with human birthdate customs, but I would warrant brawling isn't one of them. Don't spoil your own festival.>

<Party,> Dee corrected crossly, <and I think this numbskull has pretty much spoiled it already.>

<Nonsense,> Brivari said calmly. <There is a better way to handle charming individuals like this. Your mother is returning. Insert the new lamp and activate it.>

<But Anthony said….>

<Do it,> Brivari insisted.

As if on cue Emily appeared, bulb in hand. "Now there," she said brightly, as Ernie wisely shushed at her approach. "Let's try this one."

"Thank you, Mrs. Proctor, but it won't work," Anthony said sadly. "More than just the bulb is ruined."

"Try it anyway," Dee suggested.

Anthony shook his head. "I know it won't work."

"I think it will," Dee insisted.

"I built this," Anthony said somewhat peevishly. "I know what will work and what won't."

Emily hovered, bulb in hand, uncertain of whether to press the issue. Dee understood Anthony's reluctance; he already felt foolish in front of the entire neighborhood, and he didn't want to compound that by failing a second time. And as she couldn't exactly stand here and explain that there was an alien lurking nearby who could make his planetarium work, Dee plucked the bulb out of her mother's hands, screwed it into the base, and turned it on.

To everyone but Dee's astonishment, the bulb burst to life. Emily smiled and turned off the ceiling light. Gasps of surprise filled the room as the stars projected on the ceiling blazed brilliantly, glowing much more brightly than one would expect from an ordinary light bulb.

Smiling broadly, Dee stared at the twinkling stars on her basement ceiling, listening to the oohs and aahs of her party guests. The light from the "stars" was so bright that she could see people's faces. Anthony's jaw had dropped; Ernie Hutton was scowling to beat the band. Dee watched with no small amount of satisfaction as Ernie slunk to the back of the group, thoroughly put out that Anthony's present was not only working, but working spectacularly. She slipped closer to Anthony and leaned her head in toward his.

"It's beautiful, Anthony. Thank you so much."

"But….but…it doesn't look like this!" he protested in a whisper. "Your mother got a regular bulb, just like I had, and it was nowhere near this bright last night. There's no way this could happen!"

Dee shrugged slightly. "You can figure out why it's so bright later. Let's just enjoy it." <Thanks, Brivari,> Dee added silently.

No answer. But five "stars" on the ceiling from three different constellations began to glow just a little brighter, making the shape of a "V".





******************************************************


3 p.m.

Copper Summit, Arizona




"Carl! Throw the ball!"

Malik paused with the basketball in his hands as the neighborhood boys stood looking at one another, wondering why he was hesitating. He had joined the children for a game of basketball to take his mind off Amar's continuing absence, but now he spotted him in the distance, walking up the street toward the house, the faint infrared signature surrounding his shape a dead giveaway that that shape was no human.

Swinging around, Malik sent the basketball soaring through the air. It dropped neatly through the hoop to a chorus of cheers. "I have to go," Malik/Carl announced to his disappointed fans. "Thanks for the game."

One of the boys glanced toward the house. "You and Tom had a fight, didn't you?" he asked, watching Tom—Amar—climb the front porch steps. "I heard him yelling yesterday. What was he saying, anyway?"

"He was just angry," Malik said, smoothly deflecting the conversation away from the fact that Amar had shouted in Antarian for all the neighborhood to hear. "I should go see if he feels better."

"Why?" one of the children muttered. "He's always angry anyway."

Malik smiled slightly as he tossed the basketball to one of the children. Amar disliked children even more than he disliked cats, and the feeling was generally mutual.

The boys resumed their game as Malik waved goodbye and headed for the house, using his shirt to wipe the sweat off his face as he walked. Earth's summer heat at this latitude had taken some getting used to when he had first arrived, and playing basketball under the huge yellow sun didn't help. But he had been badly in need of a distraction, and he found basketball an interesting challenge, what with the bouncing, turning, and throwing required. Much different than football, where one merely grabbed the ball and ran. Boring.

He found Amar in the kitchen making a sandwich. "Where the hell have you been?" Malik demanded.

"Out," Amar answered shortly.

"Got that right," Malik retorted. "Since yesterday afternoon."

"Doesn't look like you missed me much," Amar observed, "what with you off playing some stupid game."

"I spent a good deal of time trying to explain your absence to the Leader, and I'm not sure I succeeded."

"What did you tell him?"

"That you were looking for a new source of materials."

"Quite true," Amar said approvingly. "This world is so backwards, it's getting harder and harder to find much of anything."

"You and I both know you weren't out looking for materials."

"We do?" Amar plopped his sandwich on a plate, which Malik promptly snatched out of his hands.

"Don't bullshit me, Amar," Malik said severely. "You went over there, didn't you? To Roswell. You disobeyed the Leader's orders, ignored all common sense and went there, didn't you? Didn't you?"

" 'Bullshit'? Listen to you," Amar said, shaking his head in disgust. "You sound like them. You look like them. Why are you such a mess, anyway?" he added, staring at Malik's sweaty shirt. "You don't have to be."

"They'd notice if I didn't sweat," Malik said impatiently. "And quit changing the subject!"

"Heavens, we wouldn't want them to think you're different, now would we?" Amar asked sarcastically, reaching for the plate. Malik moved his hand back further.

"Answer me, or I'll go to the Leader and tell him I covered for you."

"That would get you in trouble too.

"I don't care," Malik said flatly.

Amar sighed. "Okay—I did go to Roswell. There. Happy? Can I have my food now?"

Malik stared as Amar snatched his plate back, amazed that he'd actually gotten a confession in anything under thirty minutes. "Well?" he demanded. "You went there—and what happened? I take it you didn't get captured, or we wouldn't be having this charming conversation right now."

"Obviously," Amar said, sitting down at the kitchen table. "Sorry to disappoint you, but you're still stuck with me."

"What happened?" Malik repeated.

"Nothing happened," Amar said between mouthfuls. "You were right—it's impossible to get in, get to them, and get them out without being captured ourselves. We'll have to wait for help."

Malik's eyes narrowed. It was unusual for Amar to make peace with common sense so quickly. Amar must have realized this because his expression turned earnest, and the sarcasm disappeared from his voice.

"Look, I know it was stupid to go there. But I had to know if there was any way, any way at all. We're so close....it's so hard to be this close and not be able to get to them. Now that I've gotten a good long look at the place, I know I'll just have to live with it. Believe me, I don't want to be captured. I saw the shape they were in, and I'd die first before I let myself wind up like that. And thanks for covering for me," he added as Malik stared at him suspiciously. "I really appreciate it. If it's any consolation, there's one good thing that did come out of this little trip—I found a new source of raw material on the way home. I brought some back; if it works, I'll go get more. I should bring that to the Leader and let him know I'm back."

Malik watched as Amar calmly put his plate in the sink and left the kitchen as though the entire matter were settled. And it was…..wasn't it? Wasn't it better this way, letting Amar have a good look around and realizing that there was nothing that only the two of them could accomplish? He might calm down now, might actually gain some perspective by the time assistance arrived.

Standing in front of the sink, Malik pondered this for several minutes before shaking his head.

"Nope," he muttered under his breath. "That was too easy."



******************************************************



8:30 p.m.

Proctor residence




David Proctor joined his wife on the back porch steps, sitting down beside her in the warm evening breeze as she watched Dee and Mac debating the merits of various trees as platforms for treehouses while Dee's new kitten gamboled about their feet. The air was sultry, the cicadas were buzzing, and to the west the sun was beginning to set just a little earlier than it had been, reminding everyone that autumn was coming.

"You throw one hell of a party," David said, smiling.

"We survived," Emily said dryly. She had her chin resting on her drawn up knees, a favorite position of Dee's. "Now just give me a month to clean up the house."

David shrugged. "They had a good time. I don't think Dee's ever had a big party like that. She enjoyed it."

"She had it coming. It's just too bad I had to have a reminder of that right in the middle of everything."

"Don't let Valenti get to you," David said. "He still doesn't have anything, or else he wouldn't be standing on our front porch making nice."

"He has more than you know," Emily said quietly.

"Meaning?"

"Meaning I didn't want to go into everything with Mac standing there," Emily explained. "He's been through so much already, what with the Army basically kidnapping him and all." She turned to look at David, who was watching her closely. "Valenti saw us the night we got the pods, David. He followed us to the creek and saw us putting them in the car."

"Are you sure?" David asked, frowning.

"I'm sure. There were too many details. He got the date right, the name of the creek right, and the fact that they were in a culvert. I guess we didn't cover our tracks as well as we thought we did."

David digested this in silence for a moment. "Well…we knew he was watching us."

"He wasn't just watching us—he was following us," Emily corrected. "There's a difference."

"If he saw us, then why didn't he stop us?"

"That's the really frightening part," Emily said, hugging her legs as though she were cold. "He wasn't the only one following us. He said…..he said an alien stopped him from intervening. An alien who didn't want him to interfere with whatever we were doing."

"And what makes him think he saw an alien?"

"I don't know," Emily said impatiently. "I couldn't exactly ask him what it looked like without tipping my hand that I knew what he was talking about, now could I?"

"No, I suppose not," David sighed. "I guess it makes sense. That other alien did show up here the very next day. Perhaps that's how they knew the pods were here."

"That's what bothers me," Emily said earnestly, shifting on the step to face her husband directly. "We're being watched David, followed—and not just by our own people. Here we are, all worried about the Army, and there's this whole other faction out there watching us just as avidly. We left to get those pods in the middle of the night—the middle of the night—and already we know a nosy Sheriff's deputy and an alien were on our tail, and we had no idea. Who else is watching us?" she asked, glancing around as if she expected people to start popping out of the bushes. "How can we know? I had no idea we were leading a parade when we left that night. It's just….creepy to think about it. I feel like there's this giant bulls eye painted on our house...on us. On all of us."

David put his arm around his wife and pulled her close, rubbing her back in silence for a long moment before speaking again.

"Do you want me to ask Brivari to leave?"

"No. Maybe. I don't know," Emily anguished, returning to her chin-on-the-knees position. "I'm willing to help them, I really am. I just don't like being a target."

"If we help them, we are a target," David said gently. "I'm afraid the one goes with the other."

"I know, I know," Emily sighed. "I'm sorry. I know I sound like a whiner. Valenti just really floored me when he told me that, and I think he saw it too."

"He still doesn't have anything on us," David reminded her. "That's precisely why he's coming to us directly. He has no evidence."

"And what about the other aliens?" Emily asked. "As if it's not bad enough to have humans watching our every move, now we find out aliens are watching our every move."

"There was only one human watching us," David reminded her, squeezing her shoulder, "and he's not getting anywhere. And there was only one alien, who didn't hurt us, who helped us from the sounds of things. No one's seen or heard from the other aliens in almost a month. I doubt they even know Brivari's here, or they would have shown up by now. They probably think he's still captive."

"But they'll figure it out," Emily said faintly, hugging her knees. "Eventually, they'll figure it out. They figured it out before."

"It's not us they're after," David reminded her.

"Maybe not. But we could easily get caught in the crossfire."

"I know how that goes," David murmured.

"David," Emily said slowly, "what if Valenti's right? What if we have bitten off more than we can chew?"

David rubbed his wife's back a bit more before answering. "Then we'll cross that bridge the same way we cross all the other bridges in life—if and when we come to it."



******************************************************



August 10, 1947, 0300 hours

Eagle Rock Military Base




"Hey, Treyborn! Treyborn!"

Private Treyborn stirred from his waking stupor to glance in Private Walker's direction. There were many people who didn't understand how horses could sleep standing up until they'd had the experience of guard duty, hours on end spent standing, sitting, or walking in the same place. While it was against regulations to actually sleep on guard duty, most soldiers learned to get mighty close while still doing a passable imitation of wakefulness. Kind of like he used to do in English class.

"What is it?" Treyborn asked.

"It's back!" Walker said jubilantly.

"What's back?"

"The dog! Look!"

Treyborn walked to the window in the nearest of the double doors and peered out. Brilliant lights flooded the area outside the doors, but he saw nothing until swung his eyes downward. The little mutt was there, up on his hind legs with his front paws on the doors, his big sad eyes begging for admittance.

"I scarfed some food from dinner," Walker grinned, reaching into his pocket and pulling out some bits of Army mystery meat wrapped in a napkin. "I had a feeling he'd be back." His hand reached for the door handle, but Treyborn's got there first.

"You're not gonna let that thing in again, are you?"

" 'Thing'?" Walker echoed. "I think you got your 'things' mixed up. The 'thing' is in there," he said severely, gesturing back toward the compound, "kept all nice and cushy and well fed by the good ol' US of A. The dog, on the other hand, is out there in the middle of the night, and it's hungry. And far more deserving of food, if you ask me."

"I didn't," Treyborn said, keeping his hand firmly on the handle. "No one asked either one of us anything. We're here to do our jobs, and our job is to guard this here entrance and not let anyone or anything in unless they got papers. You see any papers on that dog?"

"You've gotta be kidding me," Walker muttered. "Let go of the door, Treyborn."

"The Lieutenant won't like this," Treyborn warned, stubbornly clinging to the door.

Walker's eyes hardened. "What do I care what that shit of a Lieutenant likes?" he asked coldly. "That thing in there had me in a headlock. It was going to break my neck! And what does Lieutenant Alien do? Argue for my life? Hell, no! He stands there and tells the General that we attacked them, that we're to blame…."

"He didn't say nothin' about who was to blame!" Treyborn interrupted. "He's the only one left who saw what happened, that's all, and….."

"….and whose fault is that?" Walker interrupted. "I'll tell you whose—it's the aliens' fault, because they killed everyone else who saw what happened. It doesn't matter who shot first. Those monsters have killed almost a dozen of our guys!"

"And we killed two of theirs," Treyborn reminded him.

"What does that have to do with anything?" Walker demanded.

"Just through I'd throw that in there, seeing as how you're keepin' score an' all," Treyborn muttered.

"Oh, I'm keeping score all right," Walker said sourly. "I'm keeping track of which side everyone's on. I already know the General and Spade and the nurse are on the wrong side. But Cavitt's not. He's on the right side!"

"And he's gonna kick your backside if he finds out you're lettin' a dog in here," Treyborn pointed out. "If you're worried about 'sides', you'd best not get on the Major's bad side. He'll have a fit if he finds out we let anything bigger'n a beetle in here!"

"And what about you?" Walker continued, ignoring him. "Are you on the wrong side?"

"Shit, Walker, this isn't about 'sides'!" Treyborn objected. 'It's about doin' our jobs! Whatever that job is, whether it's lookin' after the alien like the nurse, or tellin' what really happened like Spade. Or keeping this damned door shut, like you and I are supposed to!"

"It's just a dog!" Walker argued, slapping the door for emphasis, causing the dog outside to jump back in alarm. "It's just a hungry little dog! What harm could it do to let it in, just in the entryway here, and give it something to eat?"

Walker's mien had shifted from angry to pleading, and Treyborn felt himself beginning to waver. He wasn't the type to stand up to people, especially not pushy people like Walker. But when it came to pushy, Cavitt trumped Walker any day, and Treyborn did not want to get in hot water with Cavitt.

"Look, Walker, I don't care about the dog. It's just that I don't want my ass whipped by Cavitt. Maybe you don't mind, but I do. And the minute Cavitt finds out about this, he'll….."

"He won't find out," Walker interrupted firmly. "How would he? He's gone at this hour. Anyone who checks on us just pokes their head in a little ways, so they won't see it. We could just let in it for our shift, let it sleep in the corner, and I'll chuck it out before our shift is up. No one'll know."

Treyborn hesitated, his hand still on the doorknob.

"C'mon, Treyborn," Walker pleaded, "I'm bored. They won't let us out of the compound, and there's nothing to do around here. This'll break things up a little bit. Hell, didn't you have a dog when you were a kid?"

Treyborn glanced out the window; he couldn't hear through the door, but it looked like the little dog was whining pitifully. It was awfully boring around here. And despite his earlier misgivings, the dog hadn't done anything weird last night. If it were alien, it should've done something weird. This place was probably just creeping him out.

"All right," Treyborn said grudgingly, stepping away from the door. Walker happily cracked the door open, and the dog bounded inside.

"Don't let it bark!" Treyborn hissed, hastily closing the door.

"It won't bark," Walker said confidently, petting the pup as its tail wagged so hard it was practically invisible. "You know how to keep a secret, don't'ya boy?"

The dog wagged enthusiastically and nuzzled Walker's hand, not making a sound. Treyborn relaxed a bit, and watched as Walker pulled the napkin out of his pocket and spread it on the floor in the corner, furthest from view of the inner doors. Lapping sounds followed.

"See? It's barely more than a puppy," Walker crooned, petting the dog as it ate.

"Get back up here!" Treyborn insisted. "If they look through the window and don't see both of us, they'll be suspicious!"

To Treyborn's surprise, Walker shrugged and resumed his post, turning to gaze fondly at the munching dog behind him every few seconds or so. Maybe the dog wasn't such a bad idea after all if it made Walker a little easier to live with.

Then Treyborn's eyes fell upon the dog. It was still eating, but it glanced up at him, and the expression in its eyes for just that split second was…..

Treyborn jerked his eyes away in surprise, then sneaked another peek at the dog; it was busy licking the now empty napkin, not looking at either of them. He turned his eyes back to the door, mentally chastising himself for being so silly. He was just being paranoid. Overreacting. Dogs only thought about whether they were hungry, or bored, or needed to pee. Dogs didn't have expressions.

Which was just as well, since the only word he could have used to describe the expression he thought he'd just seen in the dog's eyes was "triumphant".




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Next week--Part 3 comes to an end as Jaddo makes a decision regarding Pierce's "offer".

I'll post Chapter 29 next Sunday. :)
BRIVARI: "In our language, the root of the word 'Covari' means 'hidden'. I'm always there, Your Highness, even if you don't see me."
User avatar
Misha
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 425
Joined: Thu Jun 20, 2002 10:44 am
Location: Guatemala City, Guatemala

Post by Misha »

OOOHHHHHH YOU REMEMBERED!!!! That or what a marvellous coincidence :D The V constellation can be seen in our night sky if you put together two stars from Andromeda, two from Triangulus and one from Aries ;) At least it resembles a lot the one that we saw on the show, because Aries alone doesn't fit the visual we got from the TV :roll:

I still want a telescope like Dee's!!!!!!!!!!! :P

AAWWWWWNNNNNNN or a planetary like Anthony's, even if it doesn't have the cool alien light Brivari provided :D Excellent touch!! I actually got "glowin in the dark" stars for a present one Christmas, and I put them on my closet in constellation patterns. It took me three days to put them, but now I get to see the sky right as it is inside of my room :lol: But a planetary would have been easier ;)

Now, now, who says a dog can't look "triumphant"? You should have seen my dog when it snatched my sister's Texan Combo from Burger King the other night! :lol: Nah, seriously, I just can picture that look on that "dog" so well, so intelligent, and Walker completely falling for it! Priceless!!!

One other thing that I completely loved about this part was Emily's scene when she was talking to David. It makes her look so human, so scared for her daughter and for the future, and the fact that she's aware things might not come to a good ending just because they are trying to be good people. What is interesting is that David is willing to give it a chance if Emily is. No doubt she's the strongest of the two ;)

Now, for all of you who are wondering what the heck is my fascination with Spanish -aside that it is my Mother language, that is- it's because I'm translating the story to my Mom, so I'm always thinking on how I'm going to tell her this or that...

That said, Kathy, you've got me thinking how this scene between Pierce and Yvonne would have worked out in Spanish, and the closest thing I could come up that will make sense to you is that they would have had to put a "nickname" on the alien. Something like when you guys call the afroamerican people "black". Put in any kind of context it sounds diminishing. That also works for Spanish.

You can not "low" anyone to the category of an object just by a pronoun like you guys do with "it". Well, in theory, you can by adding an article before the name -like "the Kathy" if you want- but in common speech, everyone uses articles before names, :roll: so... it wouldn't have sounded like what you wanted.

Other way would have been by the "tone" they would say the word "alien", but of course, Pierce is not having a "tone", so Yvonne wouldn't have been able to catch him on that one. And one last way of diminishing names is by adding a "sufix" -I think is called like that- to the words, but again, people don't talk like that in common speech -I totally feel like TLOTR here...- so, that wouldn't have worked for the long run either.

The Spanish lesson is now over ;) Hope I did make sense!

Misha
User avatar
Kathy W
Obsessed Roswellian
Posts: 690
Joined: Thu Oct 31, 2002 5:06 am

Post by Kathy W »

Hello to everyone reading! *wave*

Misha: Of course I remembered. ;) At least I remembered that one couldn't get a "V" from Aries like they said on the show. If you're willing to borrow, you can make a "V" from all sorts of different combinations. :mrgreen:

I do remember being at the Air & Space Museum's planetarium in Washington, D.C., and the presenter announced one of the combinations as "that 'V' shaped constellation", sending my family into a fit of giggles. :lol: (I think it was Taurus? I'd have to look it up again.) Whatever it was did make a "V", but it wasn't the perfect "V" we saw on the show, so I used the borrowing method here.

As for Emily, she's going to continue having problems with the risk they're all taking in helping the aliens. From her perspective, she'd only just gotten her life back to normal a short time ago when World War II ended and her husband managed to survive. And now here she goes again, living with fear and uncertainty. I can't blame her for not wanting to go back to that, but unfortunately that's what she'll have to live with (again) if the Proctors continue to be alien allies.

You must have quite a time translating to your Mom sometimes. :mrgreen: (You're welcome. ;) ) I wonder what that says about English that we have such a quick and easy way to reduce someone to a "thing". Hmm.





CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE


August 10, 1947, 1625 hours,

Eagle Rock Military Base





Silence.

Jaddo was accustomed to seeing silence as a benefit, the way humans did when they tacked the word "blessed" in front, or used the phrase "silence is golden". He usually preferred silence to conversation, idle or not, and solitude to company. So he was unprepared when the usually friendly silence rose up as an enemy, threatening to drive him mad.

The human doctor had been as good as his sadistic word—save for daily visits from a single individual to administer the hated serum, Jaddo had been left completely, utterly alone. Three times a day, the door opened and a tray of food was pushed in on the floor. No one entered—only hands were seen, and then the door closed. The window in the door had always been covered, and it remained so. No faces appeared in the windowed room toward the ceiling. For one who had spent his life avoiding the company of others, not always successfully, the growing realization that he actually needed the company of others was startling…and disturbing.

Mere solitude was not the only enemy. Other changes had been made, none of them profound by themselves, but all contributing to his misery. Food arrived erratically, and it was always exactly the same. Coffee was conspicuously absent. He had emerged from the hated "shower" one day to find the table and chairs missing from his room; now there was only a bed. The glaring lights were left on at all times. This, plus the erratic arrival of the unchanging food made it very difficult to gauge the time of day or how much time had passed. Even Jaddo's excellent inner clock could not function without at least a few guideposts. He was losing track of time, had nothing to do and no one to talk to, no where to sit, even, besides the bed. The prospect of this continuing indefinitely was truly frightening. He was losing the battle in this battle of wills.

Now, sitting on the floor, his knees drawn up, his back against the wall, his head buried in his arms, Jaddo finally began to genuinely consider the doctor's proposal. When this nightmare had first begun—two days ago? Three? Four?—he had been so angry that he had briefly considered breaking the neck of the man who entered to administer the serum. Only the knowledge that escape would be impossible in a sedated state kept him from doing that. He had also considered feigning illness, ultimately deciding that the stillness required to pull off that subterfuge would be worse than his current situation and would ultimately net him nothing. And what of Brivari? His lack of access would seriously jeopardize any attempt at escape. Not to mention the fact that he must be furious by now after all the times he had admonished Jaddo to "keep them busy". No doubt he would get an earful about that once this finally ended.

If it ended. That was the key question now. Acceding to the human doctor's demands went against every nerve in Jaddo's body. He'd had a great deal of time to think recently—more than enough—and if he played his hand right, he might be able to extract some advantages from this situation which would make the bitter pill of giving the doctor what he wanted easier to swallow, make it more of an exchange as opposed to a capitulation.

Jaddo straightened up, glancing across the bright, empty, silent room toward the door. The door itself had never been an obstacle; this room had not been constructed as a cell. The obstacle was the human soldiers on the other side, all armed with tranquilizer guns and far too numerous to avoid even if he were able to shift or use his abilities. But the door….perhaps he should make it clear just how little of an obstacle that was.

Striding purposefully to the door, Jaddo balled his right hand into a fist and smashed it through the window, sending glass flying everywhere. Ripping aside the covering that usually blocked his view of the hallway outside, Jaddo peered through the opening to find several soldiers, the closest crouching with their arms over their heads to avoid the glass, the furthest scrambling for their weapons, every single face a mask of terror.

"Summon the one you call 'Pierce'," Jaddo announced. "I wish to speak with him."

It took a full thirty seconds before those witless human soldiers regained their senses and obeyed his instructions. Orders were barked to dispatch messengers, to sweep up the mess, and to keep their weapons trained on him. Ignoring the blood running down his arm, Jaddo backed away from the window and stood facing the door, arms crossed in front of him, waiting. He knew it would not be long, and he still had a card to play.




******************************************************



Dr. Pierce scurried along the hallway, slowing when he came to the prisoner's room. The breathless and near hysterical soldier who had reported to him not two minutes ago was right: The window in the door was gone, completely shattered. Pierce stepped gingerly around the glass on the floor, wondering if this latest development could be used as an excuse to upgrade the facilities. Both he and Cavitt had been pushing to build a more secure cell for the prisoner, but the Pentagon had been coy; they weren't certain the prisoner would remain here, so they were reluctant to allocate funds, which served as yet another reminder that their positions as Commanders of this operation were tenuous at best. They needed to produce tangible, useful data by the time Ramey returned in early September, or they might not get another chance.

But it looked like the odds had just turned in their favor. Pierce gazed through the empty window frame to see the prisoner standing stock still, facing the door, his right arm covered in blood. He appeared calm, even bored, but Pierce knew better. Pierce had stood in the darkness of the observation room, always keeping far enough away from the window that he would not be seen—it was important that the sensory deprivation be as complete as possible—and watched as the alien had begun to crack. And here they were, barely forty-eight hours after delivering his ultimatum, and already the alien was prepared to talk. That was faster than Pierce had dared to hope…thank goodness. Cavitt had been climbing the walls.

"Has it—he—tried to escape?" Pierce asked a nearby soldier, silently regretting that he'd ever promised Lieutenant White that he'd stop referring to the prisoner as "it".

"No, sir," the soldier replied, casting nervous glances at the still, haughty form of the alien. "Just smashed the window and told us to go get you. Cut its hand to shreds in the process. Idiot," he muttered under his breath.

Oh, no, Pierce thought, peering through the window. This one was many things, but an idiot wasn't one of them. He would enjoy getting inside this one's head like he had enjoyed no other.

"Open the door," Pierce ordered the soldier, "and wait out here."

"But…."

"I will go in alone, Private," Pierce said firmly. "Is that clear?"

The soldier gave Pierce a look that made it clear that he, too, had now earned the title of idiot, and unlocked the door. Pierce stepped inside, the now relatively useless door closing behind him. The alien said nothing, merely stood there, staring at him.

"Interesting," Pierce said, with a nod toward the door. "A little overdramatic, don't you think?"

"On the contrary," the alien replied. "I believe it had the desired effect."

"Yes. Yes, of course," Pierce answered. He tucked his hands into the pockets of his lab coat, suddenly feeling the lack of a chair. "So," he said pleasantly. "Have you had enough yet?"

"I am prepared to accept your proposal on a trial basis," the alien answered.

Pierce smiled at the implication. "A trial basis, you say? Well, I suppose you could always stop cooperating and return to your….blissful solitude."

"I have two conditions."

Pierce blinked. "You have….you have conditions? You have conditions?"

"Do you wish to hear them or not?"

"By all means!" Pierce said expansively, smiling. This should be good. "And what are your…. 'conditions'?"

"First, before I will begin cooperating with you, you will bring the Healer to me."

"Why?"

"I wish to ascertain that she is, in fact, still here. Or even alive, for that matter."

"Alive? Why wouldn't she be alive?"

The temperature of the alien's voice dropped several degrees. "You would do anything to get what you want. Including murder, if that were necessary."

Pierce's eyebrows rose. "You have a low opinion of humans, don't you?"

"Correction. I have a low opinion of you."

Pierce felt his jaw twitch in spite of himself. Don't fall for it, he chastised himself severely. It's trying to rile you. And succeeding. "I see," Pierce said slowly. "I made it clear that Lieutenant White would reappear if and only if you agreed to cooperate with me. I'll need to have some evidence of that cooperation beyond mere words before I'll allow her to return because….well, you see, I have a rather low opinion of you. Or of your trustworthiness, at any rate."

"My second condition is that the Healer be allowed access to this room at any time, not just at mealtimes," the alien continued, ignoring Pierce. "If and only if these conditions are met will I consent to a trial period of cooperation."

"You can't be serious!" Pierce exclaimed, dumbfounded. "My dear Mr. Doe, you are in no position to be setting 'conditions'! Lieutenant White's mere reappearance is contingent upon your cooperation; actually increasing her visits will require a good deal more. Now if you'll excuse me, I've had just about enough of this nonsense."

"You're going to lose me. You know that, don't you?"

Pierce paused. "Lose you?"

"Do you really think I don't know what's going on out there?" the alien asked softly, a small, maddeningly satisfied smile on its face. "I am the first being from another planet anyone on your world has ever seen. The list of those vying for your position must be very long indeed. And if you are not successful…if you do not produce information for those above you, others will take your place."

The alien took a step closer. "I offer you the opportunity to keep that place. And all I ask in return is something well within your power to give. Are you really willing to jeopardize your position so lightly? What will your General say when he returns and discovers I have offered my cooperation in exchange for so small a thing and you refused? He will not be pleased."

"Perhaps not," Pierce said, struggling to keep his voice level. It was right on all counts, and it obviously knew that. "But the General won't be returning for a good long while. You won't last that long. We both know that. The only reason we're having this conversation is because you can't stand the isolation any longer. So perhaps you'd best think that over carefully before deciding to wait out the General. And while you're at it, spare a thought for whoever might take my place. I'm an angel compared to some others out there. Others at the top of that list."

To Pierce's dismay, this speech had no effect on the alien, who was obviously, annoyingly, smiling now. "Oh, I have no intention of waiting for the General's arrival," it said smoothly. "If you are disinclined to grant my conditions, I will merely take my proposal to your colleague….what's his name? Cavitt?"

Pierce felt the color drain from his face. He knew without asking exactly where this was going—it was a brilliant move, a hard thrust to one of his weakest spots. Accordingly, both his admiration and his hatred for the creature in front of him rose.

"I am willing to bet that the one named 'Cavitt' will have a different view of this entirely," the alien said in a conversational tone. "Just imagine how pleased he will be if he is the one to secure my cooperation at so small a price. Imagine how that will elevate him in the eyes of your superiors. I could offer to cooperate with him and only him," it continued, warming to its subject. "Under ordinary circumstances, he might object to that. But then these aren't ordinary circumstances….are they?"

"Do you have any idea how much you would lose if Cavitt becomes your keeper?" Pierce demanded, desperate for some leverage. "You'd be downright idiotic to ally yourself with him! I am a doctor, a 'healer', as you say, just like the Lieutenant. You are far more likely to receive better treatment at my hands than his!"

The alien's eyes narrowed, and when he spoke, his voice was low and hard. "You are no 'healer'. I know what you are. You like to use people, to own them, and you hide your fetish behind the mantle of a title which is merely a sham, a socially acceptable excuse for you to behave in socially unacceptable ways. You are not interested in 'learning' about me—you are interested in bending me to your will. And I promise you, that will not happen. Not if I have to sit alone in this room for the rest of my miserable life."

The alien stopped, glaring at him, while Pierce tried not to wither under that fierce gaze. He didn't doubt for a moment that it was telling the truth—it would take its chances with Cavitt just to spite him. And Cavitt would gladly accept its 'conditions'; hell, Cavitt would lock Lieutenant White in here with it if that would get him what he wanted. Sheridan lacked subtlety, lacked the patience to selectively grant and deny what it wanted most to attain cooperation. And the laurels he would gain by going to the brass with whatever it told him….Pierce was getting nauseous just thinking about it.

"You have until the next meal," the alien announced with finality, "whenever you decide that is. If the meal does not arrive with the Healer, I will assume you have declined my conditions, and I will offer them instead to your colleague."

"Now that you've told me that, just exactly how do you expect to gain access to the Major?" Pierce asked, desperate for a parting shot. "I can always order the men to come for me even if you ask for Cavitt."

The alien smiled condescendingly. "Don't be a fool. You wouldn't be able to keep that up for long. Cavitt would hear about my spurned request in short order, and then how would he react? Your men know the answer to that question; they will bring him if I ask because they fear him far more than they fear you."

"As should you," Pierce hissed urgently, finally letting his temper slip. "I'm telling you, throwing in your lot with Cavitt would be a huge mistake!"

"A mistake for you, absolutely," the alien agreed. "Since you feel so strongly about that, shall I assume that you have acquiesced to my conditions?"

And Pierce may have done just that if he hadn't looked up, hadn't seen the look of supreme satisfaction on the alien's face. It had him between a rock and a hard place, and it knew it. Here he'd thought it had been cracking these past two days, alone in this silent room, and it had just effectively turned the tables, using his own weaknesses against him. Impressive.

And infuriating. Turning on his heel, Pierce marched to the door and banged on it, causing a flurry of activity outside as the soldiers scrambled to unlock it. "Doctor?" one of the soldiers asked as the door swung open. "Are you all right?"

Pierce swung his gaze back and forth from the quizzical soldiers to the alien, who remained standing with arms crossed, facing the door. Only now it wore a satisfied smile, the kind of smile one sees on the face of a cat who knows the days of the bird it watches are numbered.

"Lock this door," Pierce ordered tersely. "And if it comes within three feet of it—shoot it!"




******************************************************




8:50 p.m.

Proctor residence



"So Mama wouldn't tell me anything else," Dee finished. "I guess Valenti didn't actually do anything; he just talked to her and left. Still, it's creepy thinking he was watching us like that. Have you ever seen him since then?" She paused. "Anthony?"

"What?" Anthony who had been gazing at the sky with a far off look in his eyes, came back to reality with a start. "Oh....no, I haven't. Haven't seen him anywhere in the neighborhood. But that doesn't surprise me—he wouldn't want to remind everyone that he was acting like a peeping tom."

Dee and Anthony were sitting on the Proctor's back porch steps, watching the darkness fall. Dee had been relating what she had learned about the altercation her mother had had with Deputy Valenti, who they now knew was the man Anthony suspected had been watching the Proctor's house with binoculars that day several weeks ago when Anthony had distracted him with firecrackers and flat tires. But Anthony had been doing a great deal of thinking since the birthday party yesterday, and he had decided that Valenti might not be the Proctor's worst problem.

"Tell me if you see him around again," Dee was saying, hands clasped around her knees, rocking slightly. "Anywhere around. I want to know what he's up to."

"I'm not sure Valenti is the one you should be worried about," Anthony said slowly.

Dee stopped rocking. "What do you mean? Is someone else watching us?"

Anthony hesitated. He was treading on thin ice here, but he just had a feeling….and his father had always told him to pay attention to his feelings, what he called "gut instincts". His instincts were very firm on this one. "How long have you known this Mr. Langley?" he asked.

"Awhile."

"When did he get here?"

"Last month."

"Before or after the crash?"

"Well….after," Dee answered, watching him curiously. "Why?"

Aha! "I knew it!" Anthony said triumphantly. Score one for gut instincts.

"You knew what?" Dee asked, confused.

Anthony shifted sideways on the step to face her. "There are too many things that just don't fit, Dee. Mr. Langley asked me all sorts of questions yesterday. I slipped and said something about you being out late the night before I caught Valenti watching you, and he wanted to know how I knew that. He asked lots of other questions too, and I told him he'd have to talk to your parents. And the day I came to drop off the telescope catalog, he asked me if I believed in aliens. Now, what do you think of all that?"

"Anthony," Dee said gently, "everyone is asking everyone if they believe in aliens. And he was probably just worried about Mama out there alone with Valenti."

"Not worried enough to go out there like Mr. Brazel and your father did," Anthony pointed out. "Think about it—doesn't it seem weird that this guy just shows up right around the time the crash happened? What if he's not who he says he is? What if he's here to spy on all of you, to find out what you know and get you in trouble? Maybe that's why he didn't want Valenti to see him. Maybe they're working together. Or maybe they're working against each other, and he doesn't want Valenti to know he's here!"

"I'll bet he doesn't," Dee murmured under her breath.

Anthony blinked. "What?"

"Nothing. Look, we know Mr. … Langley. He's a friend, not a stranger. How could he be spying on us if he's a friend?"

"I don't know," Anthony said peevishly, his argument beginning to crumble. "Maybe they got to him! Maybe they paid him to find out something, or…or threatened him, or….and that's another thing," he added, suddenly remembering something. "He said he was a relative. But your father said he was a friend of the family."

"He's a very close friend of the family," Dee explained.

"That's what your father said, but that doesn't explain why Mr. Langley called himself a relative," Anthony pressed. "Even close friends don't try to pass themselves off as relatives."

Dee shook her head. "Anthony, I don't…."

"I know he's not who he says he is!" Anthony burst out, drawing another wide-eyed look from Dee. "I don't know how I know that…I just do. Something weird is going on, and I think he's the one you all ought to be careful with."

Anthony stopped, feeling his face flush with embarrassment. He'd probably just made a complete fool of himself. Maybe it was a good idea to pay attention to your instincts, but not actually say anything about them. He glanced miserably over at Dee, waiting for her to laugh at him and tell him what a fool he was.

"I think I should go get my telescope," Dee said suddenly.

"Your…..your telescope?"

"Yeah," Dee said firmly. "I think this is a really good time to show you my telescope."

Anthony's mouth dropped open as Dee stood up and retreated into the house, shooing her still unnamed kitten back into the house as she closed the porch door behind her. What on earth did telescopes have to do with Mr. Langley and Deputy Valenti? Besides, he wasn't in a hurry to use Dee's telescope. He'd only gotten a glimpse of it through her bedroom doorway, but that glimpse had been enough to tell him that it wasn't a very good one, not much more than a spyglass, really. He hadn't said anything because he hadn't wanted to hurt Dee's feelings about her present, and he'd been relieved to arrive here tonight and find she didn't have it set up already. That was odd, when he thought about it—one would think she would have wanted to use her birthday present—but its absence meant he was able to skirt the issue of its poor quality just a little while longer. And that Mr. Langley said he knew about telescopes, Anthony remembered darkly. Another lie.

Dee reappeared behind him, holding the telescope in both hands like it was heavy. She set it down on the ground and spent a moment aiming it at the thin sliver of moon visible in the sky, while Anthony sat beside her trying to think of something diplomatic to say. Nothing came to mind.

At length Dee looked up. "Go ahead," she said. "Look."

Time for brutal honesty. "Dee, I don't know how to say this nicely, so I'll just say it straight out," Anthony began. "You're not going to be able to see much of anything with that telescope."

"Why don't you have a look," Dee suggested, ignoring him.

"Look, I know it's your birthday present, and I don't want to make you feel bad, but…well….that's an awful telescope," Anthony said, feeling mutinous. "It's the cheapest one they make—and no disrespect to your father, or anything, because I know how expensive they are. The only reason mine is pretty good is because all of my grandparents and a bunch of aunts and uncles helped pay for it."

"Just take a look," Dee said patiently.

Reluctantly, Anthony put his eye to the end of the telescope and saw exactly what he expected to: A fuzzy, thin, crescent moon. These cheapies didn't focus very well either.

"Okay, now let me look again," Dee said.

Anthony pulled away and watched Dee staring through the telescope, her hands cupped around the lower portion. What was she doing? "Now look," she instructed, pulling away.

"Dee…"

"Look."

Sighing, Anthony looked again…and was instantly confused. What was he looking at? A dusty, barren gray landscape….a big, dish-shaped depression in the ground….she must have aimed it wrong. But it was pointing at the sky—what could he possibly be looking at in the sky that was dusty and gray?

Anthony pulled his eye away and stared, confused, at the cheap little telescope. "This is even worse than I thought," he said slowly. "I have no idea what you focused it on, but…"

"I focused it on the moon, Anthony," Dee said.

"But that's not the moon," Anthony protested. "It's…."

"….the surface of the moon," Dee finished, looking at him expectantly.

It took Anthony a full minute of gaping and looking, each in turn, before he finally found his voice again. "But…that's not possible! You can't see the surface like that except with the biggest telescopes, like the one at Mount Palomar! Telescopes work by gathering light, and in order to gather this much light, this thing would have to be huge, and have much better lenses, and…."

Anthony stopped because Dee wasn't reacting to his telescope primer. She was just sitting there saying absolutely nothing, eyeing him expectantly. Like she was waiting. Waiting for him to figure it out.

"You know about telescopes?"

"A bit."


Anthony sat back on the porch steps, bumping into the railing. The conversation he'd had with Mr. Langley suddenly made a whole lot more sense.

"The bigger the lenses, the more light it can gather, and the more you can see."

"Yes, I can see why you would think that."


"Oh my God," Anthony whispered. How could he have been so stupid? But actually, he hadn't been stupid—he'd suspected right from the beginning, and dismissed the thought as nonsense.

"I….I….." Anthony tried to say something, and gave up. His throat wasn't working. Although judging from the thumping in his chest, his heart was working just fine.

"I just wanted you to know we don't have to worry about….you know," Dee said cryptically.

Speechless, Anthony nodded, mentally shifting the new pieces of the puzzle. Did Dee mean that Mr. Langley was an….an….an alien? But how could he be? Aliens wouldn't look human, would they? What were the odds that another species on another planet would look just like ours? Or maybe…maybe humans had left Earth a long time ago and gone somewhere else. Maybe that explained the Anasazi, that Indian tribe that had just up and disappeared. Maybe they went to another planet! Or…maybe Mr. Langley wasn't an alien himself—maybe he just knew the aliens. Or worked with them, kind of like it seemed the Proctors were doing. Maybe…."

Overcome by 'maybe's', Anthony opened his mouth to launch into a torrent of questions and checked himself just in time. "I said I wouldn't ask," he said, desperately regretting having made that promise.

"You didn't," Dee replied.

"And you said you couldn't tell," Anthony reminded her, wondering if her lapse would earn him one of his own.

"I didn't. I'm just showing you my birthday present."

Anthony stared at her, amazed that she could sound so innocent. She was right, of course. She hadn't said a word about Mr. Langley, or aliens, or the crash. She'd just shown him her telescope and let him put it all together. He wasn't even certain he'd put it together right, but he'd put enough together that he no longer needed to worry there was a spy in the Proctor's house.

"Um…shouldn't we put this away?" Anthony asked nervously.

"Why?"

"Well…what if someone finds out?" Anthony said, glancing worriedly around the now dark backyard.

"Finds out what?" Dee asked. "This is just an ordinary telescope."

Ordinary looking, not ordinary, Anthony thought silently, realizing there was nothing on the outside to suggest that there was anything the least bit extraordinary about this telescope. The fact that it was such a cheap one only added to that impression. Whoever had altered this had hidden what it could do very, very well.

"Can we see Jupiter tonight?" Dee asked casually.

Anthony had to think a minute before nodding. Normally he would have been able to answer a question like that immediately, but his brain was a little flustered at the moment.

"So…wanna see all the moons?" Dee asked.

"Can….can this do that?" Anthony whispered, still unable to shake the impression that someone might be watching them.

Dee nodded quickly, eyes shining, and for a moment Anthony realized how hard this must be for her. She had this wonderful telescope, but she couldn't show it to just anybody. Now she looked every bit the birthday girl who wanted to show off her present to the one person she could safely share it with…and the one person who could really appreciate its worth. And moons? Hadn't she said before that Jupiter had lots of moons? Was he really about to pass up a chance to see that?

"You find Jupiter for me," Dee was saying, "and then I'll show you the moons. Deal?"

Anthony looked around the dark backyard. There was no one else here—it was just him and Dee and a cheap little telescope that looked like thousands of cheap little telescopes all over the country. All over the world, perhaps.

He sat forward eagerly on the step. "Deal!"



******************************************************



2130 hours

Eagle Rock Military Base




Yvonne approached the prisoner's room, balancing the tray filled with food, not really believing this was going to work. Only a half hour ago she had received a visit from Lieutenant Spade, and what he'd told her sounded too good to be true, especially in light of the altercation earlier today between the alien and Doctor Pierce. Supposedly the few men who had witnessed that had been ordered to keep quiet, so of course the entire compound knew about it. Details were sketchy and hotly debated, but there was general consensus on two points: The alien had broken the window in the door and demanded to see Pierce, and Pierce had left that interview hopping mad.

"What happened?" Yvonne had asked Stephen when he slipped into her quarters a short time ago. She'd already heard bits and pieces, and feared the worst. If Pierce was as angry as he was reported to be, that could mean only one thing—the alien had turned down his "offer", which meant that Pierce and Cavitt wouldn't have much to present to the General when he returned in just a few short weeks, and they might lose the prisoner all together.

"You're not going to believe this," Spade had answered after closing the door behind him, "but I've been ordered to tell you that you're to have dinner with the prisoner."

"What?" Yvonne exclaimed. "But…but that must mean he gave in! Then why is Pierce so angry?"

"I'm working on that one," Spade had said. "None of my guys overheard what Pierce and our 'guest' said to each other, but they did say that Pierce was furious when he left. And get this; not only are you eating with the prisoner again, but we're to give you twenty-four hour access to him."

"You mean I can go in there any time?" Yvonne had asked, wide-eyed.

"Yup," Spade nodded. "Day or night."

Day or night, Yvonne echoed silently. That meant the free alien now had practically unfettered access to his friend. "What on earth would have made Pierce agree to something like that?" she had asked in disbelief. "Have you seen him? Did he say anything?"

"He gave me the new orders," Spade replied. "He didn't seem angry. A little clipped, maybe, a little short, but not angry. He didn't say anything about what happened, but it must have been a doozy. I imagine the alien'll tell you."

Yvonne shook her head. "Don't bet on it. He's civil, but he barely speaks to me. You'll probably find out what happened before I do."

And so Yvonne had headed for the kitchen to pick up dinner, hopeful that things would now get back to normal, or whatever passed for normal in her weird existence. This was the second bit of good news she'd received today, the first being that her bathroom wastebasket remained unmolested, the pair of stockings she'd hidden at the bottom still firmly in place. She still had no idea what Corporal Brisson had been doing in her quarters, but whatever it was, it appeared to have been a fluke. She hadn't even bothered mentioning it to Stephen.

Now she reached the prisoner's room, noting the brand new glass in the window frame of the door. According to Stephen, there had been some debate about whether or not to replace the window or just board up the door entirely. The window had won, although Yvonne noticed that the guards were now stationed across from the door instead of standing on either side of it. Looking at the closest of those guards now, Yvonne was relieved to see Private Thompson. Even if this was all just some nasty hoax from Pierce, at least there would be one kind soul here.

"Evening, ma'am," Thompson said, eyeing her tray. "I imagine you'll be wanting the table and chairs back?"

Oh, yes. She'd heard about that. The removal of the furniture, the never changing food, lights on all the time. Pierce definitely wouldn't win any awards for subtlety.

"I would, thank you," Yvonne answered. Thompson sent a couple of guards off to fetch the furniture, and unlocked the door. Yvonne slipped inside, two wary guards following her as always. The alien, who had been lying on the bed, sat up immediately when he saw her. His right arm was badly scratched. It was clear from the look on his face that until this moment, he hadn't realized that he'd won.

"Good evening," he said out loud.

Yvonne stared. He had never addressed her first. He'd always responded to a greeting from her, but never initiated one....and he actually sounded like he meant it.

"Good evening," she replied in surprise, glancing down at the brimming tray. "I was told to bring you dinner. I…."

Her voice trailed off. He wasn't looking at the food—he was looking at her. Why was he staring at her like that?

The two guards bearing the furniture entered the room, and Yvonne pointed to the far corner, affording herself some measure of protection from the hazards of responding to someone no one else could hear. Not that that had really been a problem; the alien spoke so little that distance from the guards was hardly necessary. She glanced up at the observation room window and was surprised to find it empty. That was odd. Usually there were at least a few people up there watching when anyone interacted with the prisoner.

Setting the tray down on the table, Yvonne, took a seat. "I brought you some coffee," she said, slipping into her usual attempt at conversation. "I heard you hadn't had any in a while."

<Thank you.>

First a greeting, now gratitude? Maybe they ought to lock this guy up by himself more often. It definitely seemed to improve his disposition.

<I am glad to see you.>

Well, of course he was. Her presence here meant he would be able to resume his visits with his friend. "I'm sure you're eager for things to go back the way they were," she replied, using the low tone she always used to minimize how much the guards overheard.

<You misunderstand. I am glad to see you.>

Yvonne froze in amazement for a moment, then set the pot down with a thump. "Where is all this coming from?"

<All what?>

"The whole time I've been here you've barely roused yourself to put two whole sentences together," Yvonne said with more than a touch of irritation in her voice. "You wouldn't even acknowledge my presence until I broke something."

<Yes. I remember that,> the alien said, pouring himself another cup of coffee, the first one apparently being gone—already. <That was an impressive move. And a surprising one.>

"I gather I didn't impress you enough that you considered me worthy of conversation," Yvonne remarked dryly.

The alien sighed. <I am glad to see you because I am glad it was you who came first. My companion will be furious with me, and I am not looking forward to that confrontation.>

"Furious about what?"

<He will be angry that I did not give in sooner to Pierce's demands.>

"So you did give in to his demands?"

<Yes. In exchange for your full access to me.> He started eating, reminding Yvonne that thought speech was especially useful at mealtime—one could continue a conversation without talking with one's mouth full. <My companion will say I should have bargained from the beginning. I know him.>

"He's wrong," Yvonne said, shaking her head firmly. "Pierce would never have bargained with you when this first came up. He needed to know that you were willing to accept isolation before he would take any counterproposal seriously."

<Try telling that to my companion.>

"All right," Yvonne answered. "I will."

<That was a rhetorical statement. Arguing with him is pointless.>

"Maybe not. I know Pierce—I spend more time with him than either of you. I would think my opinion would count for something."

<I doubt it.>

"I'll be seeing your friend before he comes here," Yvonne said. "Perhaps if I mention to him that letting Pierce fret for a couple of days was a good idea…."

<Do not speak of it to my companion.>

Yvonne put her fork down, her food forgotten. "And since when do you tell me who to speak to and what to say?" she asked indignantly. Wonderful. Their first conversation, and it was turning into a confrontation.

<What unhappy twist of fate has decreed that everyone should argue with me?> the alien grumbled.

"Everyone argues with you?" Yvonne repeated skeptically. "Are you sure you don't have that backwards? It seems more likely that you argue with everyone else."

<I think I liked you better when you were silent,> the alien said acerbically.

Yvonne thought about that for a moment. "No you don't. You like to argue. It's how you converse."

Alien and nurse stared at one another, the alien with surprise, the nurse with certainty. She wasn't sure exactly where that little revelation had come from, but she was willing to bet very good money that she was right. This one was just disagreeable by nature. No wonder he didn't like being alone—that meant there was no one to fight with.

<Are all human women this contrary?> the alien said peevishly.

"I don't know," Yvonne replied with amusement, sure of her footing now. "I'm not acquainted with 'all human women'. And I would describe myself as 'stubborn', not 'contrary'."

<There's a difference?>

"Absolutely. Stubborn means you just hold your ground. Contrary means you're actively opposing someone."

<Like you're doing now?>

Annoyed, Yvonne set her fork down with a clack. "You know, I think I liked you better when you were silent."

<No you don't.>

Yvonne looked up in surprise. He was smiling ever so slightly, so slightly that anyone else might have missed it. But she didn't miss it, nor did she miss the fact that he was right.

My goodness, but things were going to get interesting now.




******************************************************



August 11, 1947, 0230 hours

Eagle Rock Military Base




Private Lomonaco cocked his head toward the double doors that he and Private LaBella were guarding. "Did you hear that?"

"Hear what?" LaBella answered in a bored tone.

"A sort of scuffling noise," Lomonaco said, staring at the doors, "like something scratching on the door."

"Didn't hear a thing. Never do around this place," LaBella yawned.

"There! Did you hear it that time?"

"I haven't heard a damned thing since I went on duty 'cept my stomach grumbling," LaBella grumbled. "Maybe Treyborn and Walker are playing tricks on you."

Good point. Walker and Treyborn were guarding the outer set of doors just on the other side of this set, and Walker had been an incredible pain in the ass recently, blaming all and sundry for his encounter with the alien weeks before. This was probably another of his little diversions. Carefully, Lomonaco eased his hand onto the door handle, preparing to pull it open quickly and surprise whoever was obviously just on the other side. He put a finger to his lips when LaBella looked at him curiously; LaBella shrugged and looked away.

In one swift movement, Lomonaco yanked the door open and stuck his head through the opening.

At first, he was confused. Both Treyborn and Walker had jumped a foot when the door had flown open unexpectedly, but neither of them were near the door. Treyborn's face, however, wore the unmistakable stamp of guilt while Walker looked defiant, as usual. Something was definitely up.

Up his leg, to be exact. Something nuzzled his leg, and now it was Lomonaco's turn to jump a foot. He yelped, stepping backward right on top of LaBella's left foot, who uttered an expletive.

Four heads peered at the floor. At Lomonaco's feet was a dog, a puppy, really, tongue hanging out, tail wagging, looking like it had just found its long lost master.

"What…..how….?" Lomonaco sputtered.

"It was Walker," Treyborn cut in hurriedly, drawing a murderous look from Walker. "It's a stray that's been coming around, and he's been feeding it and letting it stay in the entryway here."

"Shit, could you confess any faster?" Walker said to Treyborn in disgust. "It's only here for the few hours I'm on duty," he added, bending down to pat the dog's head. It licked his hand, its tail wagging harder. "It was pouring the first night it showed up, and the poor thing was starving."

Lomonaco opened his mouth to say something, but LaBella beat him to it. "Look at the big boy!" LaBella crooned, his sore foot forgotten. "Such a big boy!" He scratched the top of the dog's head, and the tail wagged so hard it became a blur.

"He's not doing any harm," Walker went on, as Lomonaco looked uncertainly from one face to the other. "It's kinda nice to have him here. He's good company. You know what they say—man's best friend. Treyborn here thought it was an alien," he added, as Treyborn flushed.

"They don't do animals, do they?" Lomonaco asked.

"Hell, no," Walker answered, chuckling. "Treyborn just thinks everything he sees is a little green man in disguise. Even little dogs."

"They ain't green, moron," Treyborn muttered.

"Ain't you just the cutest little alien I've ever seen?" LaBella singsonged to the pup, as everyone but Treyborn laughed. "I gotta admit it's an ugly dog, but not as ugly as those aliens. What'dya think, Lomonaco?"

Lomonaco looked down at the outrageously happy pooch, and he had to admit there was some serious heart string-tugging going on here. It was a rather ugly little bugger, but its happy expression tended to downplay its lack of attractiveness. Hesitantly, he reached down to pet the dog and was rewarded with another storm of tail wagging and hand licking.

"We just keep it here in the entry," Walker said in a coaxing tone, "and I bring a little food every night, in case he shows up. There's no brass around at this hour, just Spade, and we can avoid him." He paused. "You're not gonna report this….are you?"

"Hell, no!" LaBella said enthusiastically. "I love dogs. Had one ever since I was knee high to a grasshopper."

"And what about you?" Walker asked Lomonaco, who hadn't answered. "Are you going to snitch?"

Lomonaco hesitated. It was a violation of security procedures, but still.....they weren't really letting it inside, were they? And it would be fun to have a dog. Shouldn't be a problem, as long as it stayed in the entryway.

"We can try it," Lomonaco decided, as Walker visibly relaxed, "as long as it minds us and doesn't raise a ruckus. But we have to keep this quiet. If Cavitt found out....well, let's just say I don't even want to think about what would happen to us if Cavitt found out."

"He won't find out," LaBella said confidently, scratching the pup's belly. "I sure as hell ain't tellin'!"

"Zipped lips won't help if he gets loose," Lomonaco said, tugging LaBella's arm as noises drifted out of the nearby guard room. "I know you want to play with him, but we need to close these doors."

The dog, however, seemed to have other ideas. Just as Lomonaco began to close the inner door, the dog suddenly lunged for it, whacking its nose on the edge of the door in the process. It yelped and whined, pawing at its nose, while the soldiers laughed.

"Now, where do you think you're going?" Lomonaco asked in a parental tone, as Treyborn pulled the dog away from the door.

"There you have it," Walker said, grinning. "I bet it's really an alien trying to get inside, right Treyborn?"

And Treyborn scowled as the rest of them broke into laughter.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Part 4 starts next week! I'll post Chapter 30 next Sunday. :)
BRIVARI: "In our language, the root of the word 'Covari' means 'hidden'. I'm always there, Your Highness, even if you don't see me."
User avatar
Kathy W
Obsessed Roswellian
Posts: 690
Joined: Thu Oct 31, 2002 5:06 am

Post by Kathy W »

Hello and thank you to everyone reading! :)





PART FOUR—CONFRONTATION




CHAPTER THIRTY


Three weeks later

September 3, 1947, 0830 hours

Eagle Rock Military Base




"Refresh my memory—what is the purpose of this useless exercise?"

Dr. Pierce sighed and set the cardboard card down in his lap. "We've already been over this, haven't we? I know your memory isn't that poor."

"And I know that you are not stupid enough to actually place value on this idiocy," the alien retorted. "I must have misunderstood the explanation. Indulge me."

"This is a test that measures your emotional and intellectual functioning," Pierce repeated with exaggerated patience. "Now—what does this look like to you?" he continued, pushing the cardboard card across the table in the alien's direction.

The alien sighed impatiently and glanced at the card. "It looks like splattered liquid."

Sitting behind Dr. Pierce, Yvonne White bit her lip to suppress a smile as Pierce momentarily closed his eyes. What the alien didn't know is that the card he was looking at was Plate I of the famous—or perhaps she should say infamous—Rorschach Inkblot Test. The image on the card was one of the ten inkblots in the test; "splattered liquid" was an apt description.

"Of course it looks like 'splattered liquid'," Pierce said, attempting to sound calm. "It's an inkblot. The point is…."

"An inkblot?" the alien repeated with disbelief.

"….to see what you think that inkblot resembles," Pierce finished.

"Why?"

Pierce rolled his eyes heavenward as though praying for strength. "I told you—what you see in these inkblots says something about your personality and emotional functioning."

"It's more likely to say something about the 'emotional functioning' of the fool who came up with this. Nothing good, I might add."

This time Yvonne had to bite a little harder to keep from laughing out loud. Her own research into Rorschach's test had led her to the same conclusion; despite the number of psychologists who placed great stock in it, she found it to be little more than sanctioned superstition. What's more, she strongly believed Pierce felt the same way. But the psychiatric colleagues Pierce would be reporting to would expect this test to be administered, so he had little choice in the matter.

"Just take the card and tell me what it resembles—other than an inkblot, that is," Pierce said wearily. "Indulge me."

The alien sighed again and pulled the card toward him, staring at it. After a moment he flipped the image upside down, as Pierce blinked and Yvonne once more fought back a smile. While many of the inkblots were easier to "interpret" when inverted, test givers were forbidden to suggest this to test subjects, nor were they allowed to give anything other than a noncommittal "do as you like" answer if the test subject asked permission to turn the card upside down. The alien, of course, hadn't bothered to ask permission before flipping the card over. Frankly, that was a greater indicator of his personality than what he thought the inkblot looked like.

Having tired of viewing the image upside down, the alien turned it sideways. This time Yvonne was unable to suppress a giggle, earning herself a stern look from Dr. Pierce. She looked away, her hand over her mouth, remembering only too well how Rorschach viewed those who turned his precious inkblots sideways.

As they waited for the alien to come up with some sort of answer, Yvonne watched Dr. Pierce consulting his stopwatch. Responses to the inkblot test were always timed, and anything and everything the subject said was duly recorded, although she couldn't see how anything the alien saw in those images could be relevant when measured against a human subject's response. What if he said the blot looked like a relative of his? Or an alien animal? She had already voiced all these reservations to Dr. Pierce, who had listened patiently and hadn't precisely disagreed with her, but had merely pointed out that since they had no baseline for alien reactions to tests of these nature, they needed to establish one.

The seconds ticked by. If a human subject had taken this long to respond, they'd probably have been written off as psychotic by now, but Pierce made no move to hurry the process. Indeed, Dr. Pierce had exhibited nothing but stellar behavior of late. He had accepted the fact that he had been out-manipulated by the alien with remarkably good grace, and kept his word: Yvonne—along with what everyone thought was Yvonne—had round-the-clock access to the prisoner. This had made her life easier, as the free alien made at least some of his visits in the late evening or early morning when she was asleep, meaning that she no longer had to while away quite so many unproductive hours in her quarters. And those unproductive hours had largely dried up of late as she had immersed herself in textbooks about psychiatry and psychology, having pointed out to Dr. Pierce that she had never worked in the field before. He had promptly supplied her with a mound of reading material which she had pursued with interest, ultimately reaching the conclusion that much of the practice of psychiatry was no more than intuition and plain old common sense, along with a hefty doses of smoke and mirrors. Not to mention inkblots.

Pierce had also kept his word about not harming the prisoner, beginning slowly with simple physical tests of strength, agility, and visual and auditory acuity. The alien excelled in all of these areas; it was Yvonne's opinion that he secretly enjoyed showing off his superior skills. He'd certainly provided a good deal of entertainment for the soldiers. Word of how much weight he could bench press and similar statistics was the talk of the compound, and Stephen had noted that in-cell guard duty was now a coveted position. Whoever was in the room at the time the tests were being administered got to watch and report back to his fellow soldiers, thus earning a bit of fame in the process. Now that Pierce had moved along to psychiatric tests, they would probably have less interesting things to report.

"This resembles a land mass as seen from outer space," the alien announced, tossing the card back toward Pierce.

Pierce's pen hovered over his clipboard, uncertain of what to write. "Land mass as seen from outer space" was definitely not on the list of approved interpretations for Plate I. Which was unsurprising, given that no one on Earth had ever been in outer space to begin with.

"Are you sure?" Pierce asked. "Do you see anything else, like….like a butterfly, or a moth perhaps?"

The alien eyed him steadily. "I will grant that I am unfamiliar with this so-called 'test', and deeply grateful to be so, but I would imagine that you are not supposed to dictate my answers."

"I wasn't 'dictating'," Pierce protested crossly. "I was merely….suggesting."

"Oh, I see," the alien said with mock seriousness. " 'Suggesting' is it? Very well then, I reject your suggestion. I still maintain it resembles a land mass as seen from space. And since none of your backward species has ever been in space, I defy you to challenge me in any meaningful way."

"Let's move along, shall we?" Pierce said with that false pleasantness he substituted for bad temper. He retrieved Plate I and gestured to Yvonne, who handed him Plate II, a black, red and gray blot. "What do you see in this image?" Pierce asked, pushing Plate II across the table.

"Two figures facing each other," the alien replied promptly, "no doubt locked in an endless administration of this foolish 'test'."

Very good, Yvonne thought. Test subjects were indeed supposed to see two figures in Plate II; if they didn't, it was taken as a sign of trouble relating to people. Pierce, visibly relieved to have heard something familiar, scribbled on his clipboard.

"But then again, I could be wrong," the alien commented, flipping the image over. "From this angle, it more closely resembles one's brain after being subjected to this nonsense on a regular basis. Yours, perhaps?"

Pierce's pencil paused in midair as Yvonne lost the battle and laughed out loud. He scowled at her, and snatched the Plate from the smiling alien.

<One of the few times I make a worthy joke, and Valeris is not here to witness it. Naturally.>

Yvonne stopped laughing as the mental voice rang through her head. Valeris. An alien name, the first she'd heard since Urza had told her his name. After all this time, she still did not know the names of either the free alien or the prisoner. Pierce addressed him as "Mr. Doe", and had dutifully used the pronoun "him", although no one else had picked up on that. She addressed him as "John".

"Is there some particular reason you're being this ornery?" Pierce was asking with exasperation. "You weren't this contrary for the other tests."

"The other tests made sense; this makes none," the alien said firmly. "My strength and senses are of obvious interest to you, but this….this is completely useless. What do you intend to learn? I'll wager human subjects can't agree on what these images represent, and I have seen things no human has ever seen. How can you ever hope to evaluate my responses without a point of comparison?"

Yvonne's eyebrows rose as Pierce threw her a grumpy look. That had been her argument exactly.

"Perhaps we should continue another day," Pierce said, starting to pack up his things. "You should save your strength, Mr. Doe. Major Cavitt will be by later for the first time, and I daresay you'll find him less accommodating."

"Have you run out of reasons to keep him away any longer?" the alien asked with amusement.

Pierce slapped a pile of inkblots on the table. "I will have you know that I 'kept him away' so that we might establish a rapport without his interference, so that we may…."

"Oh, spare me," the alien interrupted. "If you have learned nothing more from me in these last weeks, you should have learned that I am not stupid." He leaned in toward Pierce. "You kept him away because it amused you to do so."

Pierce stared at the alien for a moment before resuming his packing. "Somehow I doubt you'll be this sarcastic after Cavitt has taken a pass at you," he said darkly.

The alien leaned back in his chair. "I am not sarcastic, merely observant. Besides, I have enjoyed watching him fume up there," he added, glancing up at the observation room window, "as have you. You know perfectly well your reasons for keeping him from me have little to do with concern for my welfare."

Yvonne looked down at the notes in her lap, carefully keeping her expression neutral. She wasn't supposed to know about what had transpired between Pierce and the prisoner—no one was. According to the alien, that had been part of the deal when Pierce had capitulated, that no one else learn that he'd been effectively backed into a corner. The alien had told her the story, of course, as he could talk to her privately, and Yvonne had passed it on to Stephen, who had been duly impressed. Pierce had likely kept Cavitt away because he feared the prisoner would make good on his threat and ally himself with Cavitt.

"I hope these past few weeks have made it clear that I keep my word, Mr. Doe," Pierce said, watching the alien closely, "and that you are much better off when I'm leading the parade. Keep that in mind, and don't do anything you'll regret later."

"I'm looking forward to the Major's visit," the alien replied with satisfaction. "If I find tormenting him to be only half as much fun as you do, then I shall consider my time well spent."



******************************************************



Franklin Delano Roosevelt School

Corona, New Mexico




Closing the top of her desk, Dee Proctor ran both hands over the freshly polished lid and smiled. The fragrance of the wood polish used on the desks each fall was one of her favorite parts of the first day of school, right up there with the brand new notebooks and freshly sharpened pencils now neatly arrayed on top. Granted she had to wear dresses to school, but even that inconvenience paled before the promise of a new classroom, new books, and a new year. The morning sun poured in the windows and excited chatter filled the room as Dee and her classmates awaited the arrival of their new teacher. And it was a new teacher, not last year's fourth grade teacher, Miss Strobel. Which was just as well, to Dee's way of thinking. Miss Strobel had a been a tiny, wizened old lady with shriveled hands, a shriveled mouth that looked as though she sucked lemons all the time, and a disposition to match. She would not be missed.

This year's fourth grade class had been led to their assigned seats by Miss Wilson, the school secretary, who had bade them wait quietly until their new teacher arrived. Everyone was seated alphabetically, as usual, which meant that Anthony, being an "E", was further away from Dee than she would have liked. Fortunately, both of them were a healthy distance from the "H's", namely Ernie Hutton, who had greeted Dee that morning by sticking out his tongue and making kissy-kissy noises. It was Mary Laura Grady who had drawn the proverbial short straw to find herself seated directly in front of Ernie, who had promptly pulled her hair. Mary Laura had responded by spinning around and planting a sharp slap on Ernie's hand with sufficient velocity to make him think twice about trying that again. Mary Laura was a bookworm, but she was no pushover.

Seated next to a window in the furthest row from the door, Dee looked out to see the older children filing in to the other side of the building where the high school was. It still seemed strange seeing all the big boys at school. When she had first started kindergarten, the war was on, and all the bigger boys had been drafted, along with most of the men in town. All students from seventh grade on had been dismissed early so they could help out with the jobs those missing men usually did, making the school empty and quiet in the afternoons. Last year had been the first year things had been back to normal, and Dee had relished the added numbers and noise. She enjoyed school every year, but this year she had been particularly keen to see it start, hoping, perhaps, that it would take her mind off everything that had happened this summer.

That hope had been shaken badly when she had first arrived at school that morning, walking by the very spot where Denny Miltnor had attacked her two months ago. She hadn't been near the school since that night, and her eyes were drawn against their will to the wall Denny had pushed her up against, and the ground below where he had banged her head, over and over. She remembered her conversation and fight with Denny vividly, but only dimly remembered Urza as a coyote soaring through the air and pulling Denny off of her, burying his coyote teeth in Denny's throat. Denny's sidekick, and most likely the new head of Miltnor's gang, had caught her eye while she was walking in and scowled at her. So she wasn't the only one remembering Denny this morning, even if she was the only one who knew how he'd died.

But then she had glanced up at the woods behind the school, the same woods where she had awakened to find three strange men standing over her, each holding a glowing stone with which she was now all too familiar. Her memory of that first meeting with Valeris was a good one, if bittersweet. If there were ghosts here, at least not all of them were bad.

"Good morning, class," a voice rang out, as Miss Wilson entered the room.

"Good morning Miss Wilson," the class chanted, rising to their feet beside their desks as they always did when an adult entered the classroom.

"I'd like you to meet your new teacher, Mr. Peter," Miss Wilson said, beaming at the classroom doorway. A tall, thin man with dark hair entered carrying a stack of supplies topped by an attendance book.

"Good morning," he said pleasantly to the startled fourth graders. "You may be seated." He nodded to Miss Wilson, who returned his nod and left the room.

Dee slid into her seat, eyes riveted to the front of the room. A male teacher? She'd never seen a male teacher. Men were always principals, like Mr. Kagen, or vice principals, like Mr. Ray. Every single teacher she'd ever seen had been female, and judging from the expressions on her classmates' faces, it was the same for them too.

"I'm delighted to meet all of you," Mr. Peter said as he arranged his things on his desk, "and I'm looking forward to working with you this year."

Mary Laura's hand shot up, and Mr. Peter acknowledged it. "Shouldn't 'Peter' be your first name?" she asked. Mary Laura was the type who always wanted everything to be just right.

"Actually, 'Peter' is my last name," Mr. Peter replied, turning around and writing his last name in big block letters on the chalkboard. "My first name is Thomas."

Mary Laura looked faintly put out, as though this information conflicted with her orderly view of the universe, but persevered nonetheless. "I didn't know boys could be teachers," she said, drawing gasps from some of the more reticent types.

But Mr. Peter didn't appear to take umbrage at her comment. "Of course boys can be teachers," he said evenly. "In colleges, male teachers are the norm, and female teachers are rare."

"That's because women aren't smart enough to teach college," Ernie Hutton announced matter-of-factly, drawing dark looks from every female in the room and titters from some of the boys. Anthony rolled his eyes.

"Interesting, Mr.,er….."—Mr. Peter consulted the seating chart in his attendance book—"…Mr. Hutton. But incorrect. There is no reason why both men and women can't teach in any school, any grade. It's just tradition, I'm afraid, and one that I am proud to break. It has nothing to do with intelligence."

"It might if Ernie tried to become a teacher," Dee commented.

Ernie looked daggers at her as the class broke into laughter, and Mr. Peter consulted his seating chart again. "I'll reserve judgment on that, Miss Proctor," he said diplomatically. "Fourth grade is much too early to be making a commitment to any profession."

Privately, Dee thought there weren't many professions out there for chronic pains like Ernie, but she kept quiet. As Mr. Peter set his chalk down, a knock sounded at the door. It was Miss Wilson again; Mr. Peter gave a her a slight wave and turned to face the class.

"We have a new student this year," he told the class, "and I'd like all of you to welcome her."

Every head in the room swung curiously toward the door, Dee's included. Corona was such a small town that any newcomers were spotted immediately, and she wasn't aware of any new people in town, never mind new people who had children the right age for fourth grade. Even if they'd moved in only yesterday, Mrs. Chambers would have seen to it that the whole town knew. Dee glanced at the faces of her classmates, but they all appeared as blank and expectant as her own.

"Come in, come in," Mr. Peter coaxed, smiling encouragingly at the doorway. "Don't be afraid." A small figure stepped through the door, hesitant and trembling. Dee's mouth dropped open.

The girl was an Indian.

Dee had never seen an Indian up close before. They lived on the reservation south of town, going to their own schools and keeping to themselves. They were considered weird, dirty, and just plain untrustworthy; it was likely that no one around here would hire an Indian for any job other than the most menial. She'd always been a little afraid of Indians, staring at the few she'd seen and wondering if all the tales she'd heard were true.

The classroom was silent, everyone shocked and staring. The Indian girl didn't budge, and finally Miss Wilson ushered her over to Mr. Peter, keeping her hands firmly on the girl's shoulders as though afraid she would run away. The girl flinched as Mr. Peter took her hand.

"This is Bright Sun," Mr. Peter said to his shocked students. "She'll be joining us for the next few months while her father has a job nearby. I'm certain you will all do your utmost to welcome her."

Looking around at her classmates, Dee wasn't at all certain they would do anything of the sort. Bright Sun's eyes remained glued to the floor. She was quite small, dressed in a simple cotton dress very much like Dee's, white ankle socks, and brown shoes that looked like they had seen better days. Her dark hair was pulled back in a braid, and around her neck was a beautiful necklace made of bright stones.

"What kind of a name is 'Bright Sun'?" Peter asked incredulously, as heads around him bobbed in agreement. Dee threw him an irritated look. If he thought "Bright Sun" was a weird name, what would he think of "Brivari", or "Urza"?

"I think it's a beautiful name," Dee said, loud enough for everyone to hear. Peter shrugged.

Mr. Peter got that look in his eyes that grown-ups always did when a light bulb had gone off in their heads. He ushered Bright Sun over to Dee's row and pointed to the empty desk behind her.

"This will be your desk," he said kindly, as Bright Sun slid silently into her seat. "If you need to ask a question, just raise your hand."

"Maybe she could ask you why she's got such a weird name," Ernie Hutton offered.

"That will do, Mr. Hutton," Mr. Peter said firmly, as titters erupted around the classroom. "Since you're so full of energy this morning, perhaps you would be so kind as to pass out the arithmetic workbooks on my desk and do the first problem on page one at the board."

More titters, now on Ernie's behalf, who rose from his seat with a scowl and headed toward the towering pile of arithmetic workbooks. Dee swung around in her seat toward Bright Sun, who was sitting with her head bowed, hands clasped in her lap.

"Hi."

Bright Sun didn't answer, or even look up.

"My name is Dee." Still no answer.

"Just ignore Ernie," Dee continued. "He's a pain. None of us can stand him."

Silence.

"I do think your name is pretty," Dee said sincerely. "And so is your necklace. Where did you get it?"

This time Bright Sun looked up tentatively, and seeing Dee's earnest expression, opened her mouth to speak. But she never did, her eyes swinging across the aisle. Dee followed her gaze to find everyone in the next row staring. Actually, everyone in the room was staring, and the expressions on their faces chilled Dee to the core. She'd seen that look before, a look of fear and sheer disgust. Only that time it had been directed at a gray figure with a big head and huge eyes who wouldn't have hurt them if only they'd left him alone.

Dee looked back and forth with dismay from Bright Sun, who had dropped her eyes again, to the wary expressions of her classmates. This was no different than what had happened to the aliens...other than that it was worse. At least the aliens were a different species. Bright Sun was human, as human as anyone here.

If this was how people reacted to other humans who were a little bit different, what hope was there for the aliens?




******************************************************



Eagle Rock Military Base




Corporal Brisson closed the door of the safe and spun the knob to lock it, holding the vial of serum in his hand. This was such a tedious process, and he was so tired of it. And it seemed so unnecessary now. Weeks had gone by without so much as the slightest sign of the escaped alien. Given the shape it had been in, Brisson was willing to bet it had died long ago, which meant that it had turned to dust long ago, and it was likely no one would ever find it. All this checking and rechecking was such a waste of time.

Sighing, Brisson headed for his workbench, only to pause halfway there. What if he didn't test the serum? Who would know? He could just enter in the log book that he'd tested it, that the test was positive, and leave it at that. Was there any way Dr. Pierce could find out? He didn't think so, but he could be wrong about that; Dr. Pierce was awfully wily. If Pierce found out he hadn't tested every last dose, there would be hell to pay.

Brisson hesitated for a good long while before finally reaching a decision. He wouldn't test this dose, and he'd see what happened. If Pierce caught on, then he'd claim a clerical error and be forewarned.

Grabbing a syringe from a nearby drawer, Brisson headed for the door. On the way he passed the Petri dishes with the cell clusters, a dozen of them shining under the warming lamps. Some of them weren't progressing, but others were dividing nicely. It looked like this might be possible after all, and Brisson smiled as he left the lab.

When they succeeded, his name was going to go down in history.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~





As the door closed behind the human, Brivari materialized from the gloom of a corner. So, he thought with satisfaction, they're getting careless. So much time had passed without seeing any sign of another alien that the human soldiers were beginning to relax the stringent security procedures that Brivari had found so vexing for so long. At long last there was some light at the end of the tunnel.

Moving to the safe, Brivari held his hand over the locking mechanism and opened it without difficulty, revealing its contents: Rows of tubes filled with amber-colored liquid, the serum which suppressed both Jaddo's powers and his ability to shift. It was ironic, really, that these tiny tubes of liquid were all that stood between Jaddo and freedom. The serum was locked in several different places inside the compound, the main base, and, he suspected, off the base as well. Finding the multiple storage locations had taken a maddeningly long time; movement in the rest of the base was relatively easy, but movement inside the compound was very difficult. Attempts to follow the human who had just left, the one usually responsible for the serum, were problematic; not only would a stranger have been spotted immediately, but even a familiar face that was not where it should be under the strict scheduling would have raised questions.

And then it got worse. Even if he could manage to replace all the stores of serum with something visually equivalent and appropriately innocuous, there was the problem of the daily testing. The serum was faithfully tested for authenticity immediately before each use; any tampering would be detected. Unless the frequency of testing was reduced, he would have to make a switch after it was tested, but before it was administered for seven days in a row, as the Healer had been quite clear that Jaddo must avoid the serum for at least one week before he could hope to have full use of his powers. The tranquilizer darts in the human soldiers' rifles would have to be neutralized as well, but fortunately, that was an easier task. Darts were tested before replacement, which occurred once a week. It would be easy to reach those with Spade's help.

Sighing, Brivari closed the door of the safe and leaned his head against it. This would be so much easier if Valeris were still alive. He would have been able to concoct something they could have passed off as the serum without so much as batting a human eyelash. But Valeris was dead, and Brivari no scientist. He could easily make a visual replica of the serum, but finding something that would pass the humans' tests was more difficult—he'd tried. And failed. Had he access to the lab in the ship, he might have been able to come up with something, but the risk of discovery was too great. No sense in both of them being captured. They would simply have to wait, and hope that the strict security procedures would ease even more as time went by and there were no signs of pursuit.

Thankfully, it looked as though that time was finally coming. Today marked the first day that the human responsible for testing the serum hadn't performed the test. That meant the humans were feeling more confident since Jaddo had finally seen sense and agreed to at least appear to cooperate, just as Brivari had predicted. Maybe someday Jaddo would learn to listen to him. Although it was hard to argue with the concession Jaddo had won from the human doctor; the round-the-clock access granted the Healer had been a huge boon.

Brivari made for the door, heading for the lab across the hallway which he knew was empty at this time of day. Hopefully, the fact that the serum had not been tested today would go unnoticed, and the human responsible for testing it would grow more lax. But while he waited for that to happen, he would continue to seek a substance that would pass the humans' test, and the best place to do that was in the humans' lab.

On the way out, Brivari passed the Petri dishes and paused briefly to inspect them. But only briefly. He knew what they were trying to do, and he knew they would not succeed.



******************************************************



12:30 p.m.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt School





"It's too bad we're on opposite sides of the room," Anthony was saying, as he and Dee headed outside for the playground at recess, having just eaten their lunches in their classroom.

"We'll just have to pass notes," Dee commented, dodging a group of children running pell mell for the great outdoors.

"All the way across the room?" Anthony said doubtfully.

"Sure. We did it all the time last year."

"Wanna sky watch tonight?" Anthony asked.

"Can't. It's a school night tonight, remember?"

"Oh. That's right," Anthony answered, as Dee smiled at his crestfallen look. They'd both had a great deal of fun with Brivari's magic telescope, even though half the time they had no idea what they were looking at. It still functioned as a normal telescope unless one knew where the levers were, so her parents didn't suspect that Anthony knew what it could do, and Dee had given him strict instructions not to tell. They'd spent every clear night for the rest of the summer gazing at the heavens; it was going to be very hard for both of them to restrict that to weekends now that school had started.

They reached the edge of the playground, and Dee instantly knew something was up. Ernie Hutton and a bunch of his cronies were chasing someone, while a knot of girls including Rachel and Mary Laura stood off to one side, conferring in whispers. "What's going on?" Dee asked as she walked up to them.

"Don't tell me Ernie's still playing his 'capture the alien' game," Anthony groaned.

"Probably," Dee said caustically. "He's got plenty of targets." And he certainly did, the playground being filled with children from first grade all the way up through sixth. She couldn't see exactly who Ernie and company where chasing this time, but it was probably some terrified little first grader.

Rachel reached out and pulled Dee into the huddle of girls. "We're not sure if we should do something," she said in a low voice, glancing toward all the chasing going on in the middle of the playground. "What do you think?"

Dee was about to ask what she was talking about when the crowd parted for a moment, and the object of Ernie's "game" became visible. Bright Sun was in the middle of a circle of boys who were closing in on her fast, chanting, "Get the alien! Get the alien!", the necklace she wore rising and falling rapidly as she spun first one way, then another, wild-eyed and panting.

"Oh, no," Anthony whispered.

"Why, that…..that creep!" Dee sputtered. "Of course we should do something! At least when he picked on me, he was picking on someone his own size—he'd make two of her!"

"But…" Mary Laura began, then stopped, biting her lip.

"But what?" Dee demanded, hands on hips in a spitting image of her mother.

"But…she's just an Indian," Mary Laura ventured.

Dee stared unbelievingly at the faces of the other girls, most of whom at least had the grace to look sheepish. Did they really intend to do nothing just because Bright Sun was an Indian?

"How can someone so smart be so dumb?" Dee said tartly to Mary Laura, who blinked; she wasn't used to being personally attacked. "What if that were me in that circle? It was me earlier this summer, and I don't remember you all having a committee meeting about whether or not to 'do something'!"

"But we know you," Rachel protested. "She's a stranger."

"What if she wasn't an Indian?" Anthony asked. "Would anyone be asking if we should do something if she was like us?"

An uncomfortable silence fell over the group. "Why are you looking at us like that?" Mary Laura protested to Anthony and Dee. "It's not like we're the ones doing it to her."

"If you stand here and don't do anything, you're no better than the ones doing it!" Dee replied angrily.

More silence. Finally Mary Laura conceded the moral point. "Fine. I'll go get a teacher."

"Good," Dee answered. "In the meantime, we have to get her out of there. They'll have her for lunch by the time a teacher gets here." All heads swiveled toward Bright Sun, still panicking in the midst of the circle of boys that had slowed their advance—they were enjoying their fun too much to have it end prematurely.

"We can't just go charging in there!" Mary Laura protested. "There are sixth grade boys in that crowd!"

"She's right," Anthony said to Dee. "We should go get a teacher."

"You get a teacher," Dee said crossly. "And I'm going to get in their way."

"Dee, wait!" Anthony called, but she was already marching across the playground, scowling. She was sick and tired of watching innocent people get picked on for no better reason than that they existed. She hadn't been able to do much against the Army, but this wasn't the Army she was dealing with this time.

"Leave her alone!" Dee said angrily, shoving her way through the circle of boys and planting herself in front of Bright Sun, whose eyes were as wide as saucers. The collapsing circle of boys hesitated; sure of strength in numbers, they hadn't been expecting opposition. Then it dawned on them that only one person dared oppose them. Granted, that person was a dead ringer for a Valkyrie at the moment, but spirits lifted all the same.

"Aw, git off, Proctor," Ernie Hutton called. "We're not after you this time."

"Sure you aren't" Dee replied sarcastically. "I suppose it's safer to pick on someone only half your size. That way you might actually win."

Laughter arose from the circle, as Ernie frowned. Behind her, Dee felt Bright Sun press into her back as though trying to melt out of sight.

"This ain't your fight," one of bigger boys said. "Butt out."

The temperature of Dee's already hot temper suddenly rose. How many times had someone said to her, "It's not your fight"? Why, oh why, was everyone always trying to tell her what was and wasn't her fight'? "I'm making it my fight," she said firmly. "If you want her, you'll have to go through me first."

The bigger boy shrugged. "Okay. If you say so." He started forward, and Dee braced herself.

But he never got there. Two more figures came charging through the crowd, and the ring of boys hesitated again as Anthony and Rachel joined Dee in the middle, forming a tight ring around Bright Sun. Rachel looked absolutely terrified, but she was there, God bless her.

"Someone already went for a teacher," Anthony said reasonably. "Unless all of you want to get in really big trouble, you should back off."

Heads swiveled. "I don't see no teacher," someone muttered.

"I knew you were a pain, Proctor," Ernie was saying, shaking his head, "but even I didn't think you'd be stickin' up for a filthy Indian."

Behind her, Dee felt Bright Sun stiffen. "She's not filthy," Dee answered coldly. "She's cleaner than you are on a good day. Take that back."

Ernie folded his arms across his chest and took a step closer. "Why don't you make me take it back?" he said, grinning triumphantly. "What'dya gonna do? Sock me in the schoolyard?"

"Don't," Anthony whispered in Dee's ear.

"Take it back!" Dee ordered, desperately hoping he wouldn't. She dearly wanted to pound this little thug straight into the ground like a tent peg, and any excuse would do.

"Nothin' you can do about it," Ernie said confidently. "You wouldn't dare."

"Mr. Peter is coming!" Rachel said helpfully.

"Dee, don't," Anthony repeated. "Mr. Peter is coming, and he'll take care of it. Dee? Dee!"



******************************************************


Proctor residence



"I'm so glad to hear that everything calmed down at last," Emily Proctor said, as she poured a cup of tea for Rose Brazel. Rose had joined her for lunch on this, the first day of relative peace and quiet now that the neighborhood children were back in school. "You've had quite a summer."

"So have you, dear," Rose said with feeling, reaching across to pat Emily's hand. Rose wasn't quite old enough to be Emily's mother, but she was old enough to be her big sister, and she often filled that role. "I'm so glad it's over. They only followed us for a couple of weeks after they let Mac go, but it was so unnerving! Do you know I think they were in the house while we were out? Nothing was missing, but I found things out of place, enough things that I'm certain someone was in there searching."

Emily set the teapot down suddenly, lest she drop it. Someone had been searching the Brazel's house? That was blatantly illegal, not to mention frightening, and once again Emily felt exposed…vulnerable….pursued, even though it wasn't her house that had been violated. But it just as easily could have been, she thought, mentally noting that what the military was searching for had been so close. They'd had no idea how close they'd been. She did, and it was enough to give her the shivers on this still-warm autumn morning.

"But that's all over with now," Rose was saying, stirring sugar in her tea. "Thank goodness! No more talk of little green men, or whatever Mac said. Honestly, him and his big mouth!" She sipped her tea. "I'll bet you're glad to be done with all of it too, aren't you?"

Emily just smiled and nodded, choking on the irony. Oh, they weren't anywhere near done with it, but she and David didn't speak of these things to the Brazels. Mac knew they were still involved with the aliens, but he'd made it clear he didn't want details. And why would he? He'd been locked up for a week at the Army base, and followed like a criminal for weeks afterward. She knew he sympathized, or at the very least didn't like the way the Army had behaved, but she couldn't blame him for wanting to wash his hands of the whole thing. The last few weeks had been blissfully calm, but there were still moments when she would have dearly loved to do the same.

"So, the tree house is coming along well, don't you think?" Emily asked, switching to a safer, less emotional subject. "I understand Dee insisted on a rope ladder she can pull up to keep undesirables out."

Rose laughed. "Not only that, but she wants to build another tree house over in that Evans boy's yard and string one of those tin can telephones between them. She'll have to cross three backyards to do it; Mac and I told her it was all right with us, but she'll have to get permission from the Macks and the Rothmans."

"Oh, I'm sure she will," Emily answered, smiling, as she set the dirty dishes from lunch into soapy water in the sink.

The telephone rang. "Let me get that for you, dear," Rose said, bustling over to the telephone. "Proctor residence."

A pause. "One moment, I'll get her. It's Mr. Kagen from the school," Rose called to Emily.

Kagen? That was the school principal. Emily dried her hands on a towel and took the phone from Rose, wondering what on earth the school principal wanted on the first day of school. "Yes? This is Mrs. Proctor. What can I do for you, Mr. Kagen?"

Rose resumed her seat at the kitchen table and picked up her teacup, only to nearly drop it when Emily exploded behind her.

"She did what?!"


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Note: The Rorschach Test is a real test. If you'd like to see what the plates Pierce handed to Jaddo looked like, go here: http://www.deltabravo.net/custody/rorschach.htm


I'll post Chapter 31 next Sunday. :)
BRIVARI: "In our language, the root of the word 'Covari' means 'hidden'. I'm always there, Your Highness, even if you don't see me."
User avatar
Kathy W
Obsessed Roswellian
Posts: 690
Joined: Thu Oct 31, 2002 5:06 am

Post by Kathy W »

Hello and thank you to everyone reading! :)




CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE


September 3, 1947, 1:30 p.m.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt School





Emily Proctor emerged from Principal Kagen's office and closed the door behind her, leaning against it momentarily for support. It was odd, really. Being sent to the principal's office was the most feared punishment one could imagine when she was in school; the mere sight of the heavy wooden door and the benches outside just waiting for unfortunate miscreants had been enough to send her stomach into knots when she was a schoolgirl. And now….well, now the prospect of a visit to the principal filled her with every bit as much dread as it ever had, even though she was a grown woman with a child of her own.

Make that a sullen child of her own. Dee sat on one of the benches, bolt upright, arms crossed, her face set in stone. Across from her sat—no, perched—Wilma Hutton, Ernie Hutton's mother. Wilma tottered on the edge of the bench as though she might fly at any moment, staring at that heavy wooden door with the imposing plaque which read, "Richard Kagen, Principal", her stomach no doubt lurching just like Emily's, and for the same reason. Several feet away, the school secretary threw a sympathetic look in their direction as she stopped typing to answer a ringing telephone.

"I'm terribly sorry about this, Emily," Wilma said, tearing her eyes away from the door for a moment. "Ernie should know better than to hit a girl."

Emily blinked. Apparently Wilma hadn't seen her son yet. Emily had, and she knew very well that Ernie had gotten the worst of it. Dee had a few scratches, a torn dress, and some scuffed shoes, but Ernie was sporting a shiner that would be blooming for days.

"I'm sure we'll sort it all out," Emily said diplomatically. "Mr. Kagen asked me to send you in now."

Blanching, Wilma clutched her purse to her ample bosom like a shield and stiffly rose to her feet. She made it to the door before coming to a dead stop, as though her feet simply would not carry her any further. Emily helpfully opened the door for her.

"Thank you," Wilma whispered gratefully, before disappearing inside, wearing an expression one might wear to the gallows. Sighing, Emily closed the door and turned her attention to her fuming daughter.

"Before you start," Dee said in a low voice, beating her to the punch, "just tell me one thing—did he tell you what Ernie and the others were doing to Bright Sun?"

"Yes, he did," Emily replied evenly, sitting down beside Dee. "And I want you to know that I'm proud of you for standing up for her, and for encouraging others to stand up for her. That was the right thing to do."

"But?" Dee asked, knowing full well there was a 'but' bringing up the rear of the praise.

"But....punching Ernie was the wrong thing to do."

"Mama…!"

"Don't 'Mama' me," Emily said firmly. "You simply can't go around hitting everyone you disagree with. That is unacceptable behavior and I won't have it. Is that clear?"

"But Mama….!"

"I said, is that clear?"

"You haven't even let me…"

"No, I haven't. And I'm not going to until you assure me that I've made myself perfectly clear. Now….are we clear?"

Dee stared sullenly at the floor. "We're clear."

"Good," Emily said, sliding back onto the bench and setting her purse down. This was undoubtedly going to take awhile, so she might as well be comfortable. "All right. Have at it."

Emily listened in silence for the next ten minutes as Dee poured out her side of the story, from the comments upon Bright Sun's arrival to the fight in the school yard. "There weren't any teachers around," Dee finished passionately. "Mary Laura went for a teacher, but we had to do something! You should have seen them, Mama, all those big boys around that tiny little girl."

"But Mr. Peter was on his way—why didn't you wait? He was literally only feet away when you and Ernie started fighting," Emily protested, mentally noting that Mr. Peter's quick intervention had likely saved Ernie Hutton yet another shiner.

"Ernie started it," Dee said sourly. "What was I supposed to do?"

"There's some disagreement about that," Emily said, eyeing Dee closely, "although Mr. Peter says he didn't see who started it, and Mr. Kagen has decided there's no way of knowing."

Dee stared mutely at the floor, her silence more eloquent than anything she could say.

"Well," Emily continued, unable to prove what she knew had happened, "you should know that Mr. Kagen has decided that two teachers will be outside during recess every day now, not just inside the building looking out the windows. You won't need to play vigilante again."

"Unless they do it again," Dee said.

"If they do it again, you do everything you did today minus the fighting. One of you should get an adult while the rest of you stand up to whoever's causing the problem. You were doing fine until you hit him," Emily added gently. "That's where you crossed the line and lowered yourself to Ernie's level. And I know you're better than that." She paused. "You didn't change his mind, you know. Ernie doesn't feel any differently than he did before. That's why hitting doesn't work."

"Then why did we just have a war?" Dee demanded. "A war that Daddy volunteered for? A war that worked?"

Emily rolled her eyes heavenward and wished for just a split second that she didn't have a child who could see through every parental and societal platitude. A child who argued with her every single time on grounds Emily found difficult to counter. Just once, she wished she had a child who said, "Yes, Mama" and was quiet.

"It took a long time for us to get into the war," Emily said, weighing her words carefully. "War—or hitting—should be a last resort, something you do when nothing, and I mean nothing, else has worked."

"Some of the newspapers said we waited too long to do something about Hitler," Dee announced crossly. "They said if someone had stood up to him earlier, he wouldn't have become as strong as he did."

"This is different," Emily insisted, annoyed at Dee's reference to all those newspapers she'd fished out of the trash, and further annoyed because, privately, Emily shared the opinion that stepping on Hitler earlier would have been prudent. "You're a child, Dee, much as you don't like to admit it. And so is Ernie. You should have let the grown-ups here handle the situation."

"You mean like they 'handled' it this summer?" Dee asked sarcastically.

The door to Mr. Kagen's office opened and Wilma Hutton emerged, huffing with indignation. Emily braced herself for what she knew was coming now that Wilma had learned what shape her boy was in.

"Well, I never!" Wilma exclaimed, coming over to Emily. "Of all the nonsense! I had no idea all this fuss was over an Indian!"

Emily's eyes widened. "Excuse me?"

"What was he thinking letting that little redskin into this school?" Wilma continued. "Of course there's always trouble when they're around! And then to blame my Ernie and your Dee for what could have been avoided in the first place by sending the two of them right back to the reservation where they belong!"

" 'Two of them'?" Emily repeated blankly.

"Her brother is here," Wilma said darkly. "You mark my words, there'll be trouble from him too before the week is out. Those Indians are always trouble."

Emily sat, stunned, unwilling to believe what she was hearing. She could feel her daughter's hot little gaze, and when she turned her head, Dee's eyes were boring holes in her, as if to say, "Well, Mama?"

"Wilma," Emily began slowly, "Mr. Kagen did tell you that Ernie and several other boys were terrorizing Bright Sun…didn't he?"

" 'Bright Sun'," Wilma repeated derisively. "Honestly, can't they give their brats proper Christian names?"

"I think it's a beautiful name," Dee spoke up, ignoring Emily's warning look.

"Yes, well, you would dear," Wilma said placatingly, patting her hand, not seeming to notice that Dee pulled her hand away as though she'd just touched acid. "You're too young to know better. You'll learn, dear, you'll learn. And these fools here will learn too, I daresay," she added, glaring in the direction of Mr. Kagen's office. "They brought this on themselves."

"I think perhaps Ernie and the others picking on a little girl half their size had something to do with it too," Emily suggested.

"That wasn't a girl, it was an Indian," Wilma clarified. "Whenever you try to mix those types with normal people, those normal people are bound to react just like my Ernie did."

"Then I guess you think I'm not normal," Dee announced tartly, as Emily threw her yet another warning look.

"Of course you are dear," Wilma soothed, trying to pat Dee's hand again and missing as Dee pulled away in time. "You're just young and misguided. I'm getting the parents together to discuss this," she continued, looking at Emily. "I'm assuming you'll attend?"

"Count on it," Emily answered, still absolutely thunderstruck.

"Good," Wilma said firmly. "We'll have this sorted out in no time. I'm off to see Ernie now. I'll let you know when the meeting is." She bustled off, with Dee and Emily staring after her, the former smoldering, the latter speechless.

"I'm really glad Mrs. Hutton wasn't one of those grown-ups I was supposed to go to to 'handle the situation'," Dee said, her eyebrows raised.

Emily stood up, her cheeks burning. She'd never have pegged quivery Wilma Hutton as a racist. Poisonous hatred certainly had an amazing effect on timid people. Not to mention a frightening one.

"You're not going to let her get away with this, are you?" Dee demanded when Emily didn't answer.

"Look, young lady," Emily said severely, her ire rising. "I know you're still angry about what happened last summer, but I didn't behave that way. Your father didn't behave that way. Mac didn't behave that way. Sheriff Wilcox didn't behave that way. Father O'Neill didn't behave that way. I am sick and tired of taking the brunt of your anger for things I never even did! You have no business acting like all adults are alike when you know better, just like no one else should decide what you're like based on Ernie Hutton."

Dee stared at her in shock for a moment before looking down at her hands, her cheeks pink.

"Now, I will do my level best to head her off at the pass," Emily continued, with a nod toward the swinging door through which Wilma Hutton had just exited with all her self-righteous indignation. "Just because I didn't haul off and sock her doesn't mean I'm going to sit back and do nothing. You know me better than that."

"I'm sorry, Mama," Dee whispered.

"Go back to your class," Emily said, somewhat mollified now that she'd vented. "I'll see you late today because both you and Ernie are staying after school for fighting. And mind you behave yourself," she added sternly. "I do not want to hear that you argued with your teacher, or pleaded your case, or were contrary in any way. You were out of line, and you will take your punishment graciously, whatever it is. Are we clear?"

"Yes, Mama," Dee whispered, staring at her shoes.

Emily looked down at her crestfallen daughter, feeling suddenly ashamed. Dee had been through so much this summer, it was a wonder she was still sane. They should thank their lucky stars if all that was left from everything that had happened was some slightly misplaced anger. "Go on," Emily said, more gently this time, "and try not to let this spoil your entire first day of school."

"You should have seen the way they looked at her," Dee whispered, still staring at the floor. "They looked at Bright Sun just like the soldiers looked at Urza, like she made them sick, or something. And she's human, just like they are." She looked up at Emily. "They never had a chance, did they?"

No. "We'll talk about this later," Emily said, not needing a translation for "they", and not bothering to point out that this latest incident was hardly the worst of the more recent examples of man's inhumanity to man. "Right now, you need to finish school."

"Yes, Mama."

Dee trudged off looking uncharacteristically defeated. Watching her go, Emily suddenly realized she'd gotten what she'd wished for: A quiet child who said "Yes, Mama". And she didn't like it at all.




******************************************************



Eagle Rock Military Base




"Look," Yvonne said with exaggerated patience, "just tell him something. Anything. Just so it's finished and the record shows that you cooperated."

" 'Cooperated' with inkblots?" the alien—'John'—said in disbelief. "I have no intention of lending credence to this nonsense." He paused and studied her closely. "You do realize it's nonsense, don't you?"

"Of course I do," Yvonne said impatiently, pushing her lunch tray away and reaching for the coffee pot. This was her third cup, and by the time they were finished, she'd probably need a fourth. "This isn't about what I think about the test, or what you think about the test, or what anyone thinks about the test—it's about whether or not you do what's asked of you."

Whoops. John's eyebrows shot skyward, and Yvonne instantly regretted saying that. "Doing what was asked of him" wasn't this one's strong point even among friends on a good day, and now he was definitely not among friends, and it was never a good day. Granted, life was better now that he was no longer sequestered and actually had something to do for part of the day. But Dr. Pierce only came two or three times a day, with the rest of John's time spent in this room with absolutely nothing to do, and all attempts to persuade Pierce to provide some sort of diversion had so far fallen on deaf ears.

Yvonne had spent the past half hour trying to convince John to go along with Dr. Pierce's ridiculous tests without success, but that was no reason to give up. If she approached the subject from the right angle, he might eventually listen to her. Not right away, of course; at first he'd bluster and carry on and pretend to dismiss her. But experience had taught her that, oftimes, a short while after an altercation such as this, John would change his behavior, in spite of all his grousing. Since that evening when he'd managed to trump Dr. Pierce, she and John and established something at least vaguely resembling a relationship. A prickly relationship, perhaps, but then she strongly suspected that was the only kind of relationship he had with anyone.

"You agreed to try anything that wasn't dangerous," Yvonne reminded him, backtracking. "This is merely silly, not dangerous. You can't claim it's harmful, so what reason would you give for refusing to do it?"

"Try stupidity," John replied severely. "As in, I'm not."

"Neither am I," Yvonne answered testily, beginning to lose her temper. God knows that was easy enough to do with this one. "And I'll say it once again because you didn't seem to catch it the first time, this isn't about the stupidity of the test. Dr. Pierce doesn't think any more of that test than you do, but the people above him, the ones who will decide whether or not he keeps his job here, expect him to administer that test. Ergo he has to administer it, regardless of his personal feelings on the matter. Are you with me so far, or do I need to slow down?"

John's eyes flicked upward at the sarcasm in her voice, but Yvonne didn't care. She'd learned long ago that this individual responded to sarcasm, and anger, and annoyance, and all those emotions that most people found off-putting, not inspiring. Sometimes the only way to get his attention was to literally get mad.

And that was certainly the case these last few days. Things had calmed immediately after John and Pierce had struck their "deal", and John had been basically cooperative with the initial round of tests of physical strength, visual acuity, and other things of that nature. But when the tests had changed recently to the psychological variety, John had turned grumpy once more, and the timing couldn't be worse. General Ramey would be here in two days, this time with an entourage who wanted to see a docile, compliant prisoner. Fat chance.

"Pierce's superiors are his problem," John said flatly. "I will leave him to deal with them as he sees fit."

"No, they're your problem too," Yvonne argued. "If those superiors aren't kept happy, Pierce goes away."

"And that would be a bad thing?"

Yvonne sat back in her chair and sighed. She didn't trust Pierce as far as she could throw him, but she had to admit he'd kept his side of the bargain. And having caught snatches of conversation from the parade of people who desperately wanted to be in Pierce's shoes, she was convinced, for the moment anyway, that Pierce might be right—there were plenty out there worse than him.

"If you won't cooperate, the least you can do is stop turning the cards sideways," Yvonne said, glancing sideways to make certain the guards were still over by the door, well out of earshot. "I'm not supposed to tell you this, but only look at them right side up—the way they're handed to you—or upside down."

John looked up from his meal in astonishment. "Why? If they want to know what people 'see', why not turn them any way you like?"

"Turning them sideways means you're brain damaged," Yvonne announced, smiling.

The resulting look on John's face was priceless. "The only brain damage is in the fool who invented that idiotic 'test', and all other fools who believe it actually means something," he said irritably.

Yvonne rolled her eyes. "Would it kill you to just look at the rest of the plates and answer the questions?"

"It might."

Annoyed, Yvonne plunked her coffee cup down on the table. "Then you should definitely take the test so you'll drop dead and put us all out of our misery."

John gave her that famous severe look which meant he was seriously annoyed, but Yvonne ignored him. He loved it when she fought back. It was almost as if he fed off other people's anger and irritation. Or maybe he just enjoyed arguing. Whatever the reason, he thrived on hearing the very things that most people would find insulting.

"General Ramey's coming back in two days," Yvonne began, playing her very last card. "And…"

"I've heard," John said shortly. "Endlessly. Pierce has plenty to present to his superior."

"This time it's different," Yvonne insisted, leaning forward, her arms on the table. "Last time no one really expected anything of Cavitt or Pierce in terms of information because they'd only just caught you and found a way to hang onto you. But now expectations are a lot higher. You need to make Pierce look good, and give Cavitt something to chew on when you see him later."

<Oh, for heaven's sake!> John erupted, reverting to "mind speech" and dropping his fork with a clatter. <I am sick to death of everyone telling me to 'give them what they want'!> He paused, glowering. <Did my companion put you up to this?>

"No!" Yvonne protested. "I just meant that…."

<As if it isn't bad enough to have to listen to this nonsense from him, now I have to listen to it from you!>

"Look, buster," Yvonne hissed quietly, losing her temper at last, "I'm trying to get you out of here. I'm trying to get me out of here. I'm stuck here just like you are…"

<Really? Are you confined to one room with nothing to do?>

"You bet I am," Yvonne snapped. "Every single time your friend is here, I'm trapped in my room so people don't see two of us!"

<Tell him that it is not necessary to send you with the exact same message he brings every time he's here!> John snapped back. <I don't need to hear it from both of you!>

"I'd say you do," Yvonne said grimly. "Has it ever occurred to you that two different people reaching the same conclusion might mean that we're right?"

John went off on a tear with another torrent of abuse while Yvonne struggled to control her temper. He knew perfectly well she couldn't respond in kind because she couldn't speak silently—a similar outburst from her would be all too audible to the guards. So she was essentially forced to sit there and listen while he threw his tantrums, which were unfortunately becoming more frequent of late. That was not surprising—he still had absolutely nothing to do between tests except restlessly prowl his room or sleep—but that sure as hell wasn't her fault.

<If you ever have an original thought, be sure and let me know,> John finished sarcastically. <If all you intend to do is quote him, be silent and go back to throwing things.>

That was too much. <Oh, will you stop it!> Yvonne exploded silently. <And if I were you, I'd be careful what I asked for, because the next time I throw something, I'll be aiming straight for you!>

John's eyes widened. Yvonne stopped, realizing even before he spoke what had happened. She wasn't sure how she knew, but she knew—that time her thoughts had hit the intended target. "How did I do that?" she whispered, hoping the guards hadn't noticed anything amiss. Fortunately, most of the guards had long ago grown bored of watching them eat, and pretty much ignored them until they got up from the table.

<Interesting,> John murmured, giving her an appraising look. <It took you longer. Much longer. Perhaps because you're an adult.>

Longer than what? Longer than who? But it wasn't working this time; it didn't…. 'sound' the same, if one could put it that way, didn't feel the same. She wasn't sure how she'd pulled it off, but she did know whether or not she was successful.

<It won't work all the time at first,> John said levelly, his fit of temper forgotten. <You're using a part of your brain you haven't used before; it will take some time to learn to control it.>

"Any chance we can get you to do that?"

<Do what?>

"Use a part of your brain you haven't used before? The part where you listen to people who are trying to help you and stop making them wish they'd never bothered in the first place?"

The ghost of a smile played across John's lips. No one else would have taken that twist of the mouth as a smile, but she knew him better than he'd like to admit. He did have a sense of humor, albeit one dry as the Sahara on a hot summer day during a drought, but it was there nonetheless.

"So…how long do I have to wait until I can rip into you the way you rip into me?" she asked, finding that she was actually looking forward to that.

<I'm not sure; I'm not familiar with awakening the brains of lesser species,> he replied, ignoring her raised eyebrows. <But as I recall, it has something to do with strong emotions, at least at first.>

"Strong emotions?"

<Anger. Fear. These tend to start the process in the first place. Eventually you will become fluent.>

"Well," Yvonne said brightly, picking up her fork again. "If anger helps me learn, given the way you've been acting, I should be an old pro by the end of the week."

Another severe look. Yvonne ignored this one too as she tucked into the last of her lunch. Perhaps it was wishful thinking, but she did get the impression he'd heard and understood her argument about cooperating. Denied their prey for weeks now, the vultures were circling closer.

She desperately hoped he wasn't so pig-headed that he couldn't see that.




******************************************************



3:00 p.m.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt School




As her classmates gathered up their belongings in preparation to go home for the day, Dee Proctor sat glumly at her desk, awaiting her fate. The afternoon had been mercifully quiet. When she had arrived at her classroom after the bout with the principal and her mother, reactions from her classmates had run the gamut from Rachel's and Anthony's sympathetic glances to Mary Laura's smug "I told you so" looks. Most simply looked baffled, as though they couldn't fathom why she would risk a trip to the principal's office over an Indian. The Indian in question hadn't even looked up when Dee had entered, her head bent over her workbook, slowly filling in the blanks. So much for gratitude.

Ernie had appeared some thirty minutes after Dee, sporting a black eye that could boast half of his nose in its territory. His furious scowl didn't do anything to improve his appearance, and the gasps that greeted him did nothing to improve the scowl. Mr. Peter had shushed the class and gone straight back to business, but it was hard to miss the smothered smiles thrown his way, or the admiring glances thrown hers, mainly from the boys. Whatever the reason, Ernie Hutton had gone and gotten himself whupped by a girl. In the jungles of the schoolyard, that was equivalent to being tarred and feathered, and Dee had returned to her spelling worksheet well satisfied that at least something good had come of this whole debacle.

Mr. Peter dismissed the class and everyone except Dee and Ernie began filing out. Dee glanced over at Ernie, who was still scowling furiously, his arms crossed tightly in front of him, but he wasn't looking her way. Then her view was blocked by a short form with dark braided hair. Bright Sun stared at the floor as she spoke in a voice barely above a whisper.

"Aren't you coming?"

"I have to stay after school," Dee answered shortly.

Now Bright Sun did look up, her dark eyes wide with alarm. "Because….because of me?"

She looked so startled that Dee decided she really hadn't known that Dee had gotten in trouble for defending her. "No," Dee answered. "Because….because of me. I….I shouldn't have hit him. Or so they tell me," she added, not at all convinced this was the case.

Bright Sun pondered this in silence for a moment. "What will they do to you?" she finally asked in that same, whispery voice. "Will they….will they beat you?"

"No!" Dee answered quickly. "Nothing like that. Mr. Peter'll probably make me write out 'I will not fight in school' a hundred times, or something like that. That's all." And give me a hand cramp that'll last the rest of the week, she added silently. At least she thought that's what would happen. Dee had never had to stay after school before, never mind been sent to the principal's office, so her understanding of what awaited those unfortunates who found themselves in that position was a bit fuzzy.

Bright Sun hesitated a moment, then dropped her eyes and headed for the door. She was the last one out, and Mr. Peter shut the door behind her, returned to his desk, sitting on the front edge and looking at Dee and Ernie.

"Both of you are being punished for fighting during recess," Mr. Peter began in a level tone, "and as I am your teacher, I have been given the responsibility of setting your punishment. I should point out that if either of you makes the mistake of fighting again, the punishment will increase. Such behavior is not acceptable; there are better ways to settle our differences. Do you both understand this?"

"Yes, sir," Dee answered tonelessly.

Ernie took a bit longer. "Yes, sir," he finally said, barely audible.

"I've given this a good deal of thought," Mr. Peter continued, "and I've decided it would be better to…."

A knock on the door interrupted him. Better to what? Dee thought, as he went to answer the door. What was he going to do? Make them spend the night there? Kick them out of school? Make them—oh God, not that—make them shake hands and apologize? Dee decided right then and there that if Mr. Peter was stupid enough to try that, she'd rather be thrown out of school.

The door opened, and Dee was surprised to see Bright Sun just outside. But Mr. Peter wasn't talking to Bright Sun; he was talking to someone next to her, just around the corner of the doorjamb and out of Dee's range of vision. Someone as tall as Mr. Peter judging from where Mr. Peter was looking. Dee craned her neck trying to tell what was going on, as did Ernie, but she couldn't see a thing. A voice floated in, an unhappy male voice, and finally Mr. Peter stepped into the hall and closed the door behind him.

Left alone in the classroom, Ernie and Dee glowered briefly at each other before looking away. Ernie didn't have much to look at, but Dee was in the row by the windows, so she could look out. And when she did her heart soared, for just outside were Anthony and Rachel, smiling at her. They waved and set their book bags down on the ground, leaning against the school wall. Dee smiled and waved back; she knew they'd be there when she got through, and that made things a little better.

The door opened again, and Mr. Peter came back inside. Dee peered through the door as he swung it closed behind him, but she could see no one in the hall now. Bright Sun and whoever had been with her had left. "As I was saying," Mr. Peter said, continuing right where he had left off, "I decided it would be better to try something other than the usual punishment for infractions of this nature. Something to get you thinking about what you did and why. After all, the goal of punishment is to teach, is it not?"

Neither Dee nor Ernie answered, but Dee sat forward in her seat, intrigued now. She'd never heard anyone refer to "punishment" and "teaching" in the same sentence. Whatever could he be talking about?

"I'm going to give each of you a paper with a quotation on it," Mr. Peter continued, "and I want each of you to think hard about how that quotation applies to what happened at recess today. You're to write me an essay of at least four paragraphs. You may leave when you are finished, but I will need to approve your work before I will dismiss you. And I will be passing these along to the principal and showing them to your parents."

Mr. Peter then placed a sheet of paper first on Ernie's desk, then on Dee's. Dee read her quotation in silence.



The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.

Edmund Burke




Stunned, Dee read it four times before glancing over at Ernie, wondering if his paper said the same thing. She couldn't see his paper from this distance, but whatever it said, he was scowling even worse than before. She glanced up at Mr. Peter, who was watching her closely, and suddenly, he smiled.

Dee looked back down at her paper, a lump forming in her throat. Whoever this Mr. Burke was, he was a drop-dead genius, because "doing nothing" was exactly how evil triumphed. "Doing nothing" was how Hitler had risen to power, how little Indian girls were terrorized, how aliens were pursued like animals even though they hadn't attacked anyone. She had done something today…a bit too much something, but done something nonetheless. And now she had a chance to speak her piece. That was worth a hand cramp, and she pulled out her pencil and eagerly set to work.

Twenty minutes and two pages later, she carried her essay to Mr. Peter's desk. On the way she glanced at Ernie's paper; only about four or five lines of shaky cursive were visible. He would be here for awhile yet.

Mr. Peter took a long time reading her essay, and when he was done, he set her papers down and smiled. "Very nice, Miss Proctor. You are free to go now."

Dee gathered up her book bag and headed for the door, with Ernie looking daggers at her as she passed. She ignored him; Anthony and Rachel would be waiting for her, and she couldn't wait to tell them all about Mr. Peter's notion of "punishment". She pulled the classroom door closed behind her and ran smack into Bright Sun, who was waiting just around the corner.

She wasn't the only one waiting. Beside her was an Indian boy, a teenager from the look of him, tall, with black hair like Bright Sun's, only his was flowing about his shoulders. His eyes were dark, his expression serious. And Bright Sun was actually smiling at her. She looked much different now that she wasn't surrounded by a crowd of disapproving people; more relaxed, more confident. "Are you all right?" she asked Dee, her voice a bit clearer than earlier.

"I….sure," Dee answered, still in shock. "Have you…both…been out here the whole time?"

"Yes," Bright Sun answered gravely.

"But….why? Who is this?" Dee asked, staring at the huge Indian boy.

"This is my brother," Bright Sun answered. "River Dog."




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I'll post Chapter 32 next Sunday. :)
BRIVARI: "In our language, the root of the word 'Covari' means 'hidden'. I'm always there, Your Highness, even if you don't see me."
User avatar
Misha
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 425
Joined: Thu Jun 20, 2002 10:44 am
Location: Guatemala City, Guatemala

Post by Misha »

Hey Kathy!!

You know what? Last weekend I watched this documentary on WWII, and it turned out the war was ended on May 9th. I'm telling you this because I want to thank you for making me take a deeper interest on this part of history :D Good books always make me look deeper into things related ;)

GO DEE!!!!! Fists and all :lol: Racism is such a disgusting problem. We have a lot of that here in my country too, so I'm well familiar with that. And I gotta admit I simpathize with Emily that she had finally had it with Dee and her accussions. Sometimes we tend to forget that not everyone is like everyone else :|

I want a teacher like Mr. Peter!!! What, essays for bad behaviour? I would be a devil then! I love to write essays :D I don't think my teachers love my ant-like writing, though... My handwriting is really small. Hm...

The ink tests, HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA I too think they are a bit far fetched when it comes to "read" into you. I saw those once when I had Psicology of Perception class, and I remember seeing one and thinking: That looks like two kosakos dancing a russian dance around a fire. Talking aobut imagination, uh? At least now I know better than to look at those things sideways :lol: I can sssoooooo picture Jaddo's face at that revelation!

I'm patiently waiting for Cavitt's visit now :) Oh!!! And I was looking for some names, and what would be my surprise when I came up with "Sheridan", which means "the wild one" in Irish I think ;)

About your early question about the "V" constellation being Taurus, yup! I always thought of it as a house, but yeah, put it backwards -or upwards- and it does look like a V ;)

English grammar is the weirdest thing ever when you first come upon it. I had a really hard time learning that every single sentence needs a subject, and because "it" is never used as a subject in Spanish, that was like, UH? But all in all, it is easier for us to learn English than for you to learn Spanish. There are a lot more things you need to learn than we do. Of course, pronunciation is the worst part of it, but I think it goes both ways :)

See ya around!!

Misha
User avatar
Kathy W
Obsessed Roswellian
Posts: 690
Joined: Thu Oct 31, 2002 5:06 am

Post by Kathy W »

Hello and thank you to everyone reading!





CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO




September 3, 1947, 3:45 p.m.

Franklin Delano Roosevelt School





Dee stared at the tall Indian boy uncertainly, while Bright Sun stood placidly at his side. "Uh…hello," Dee ventured. He didn't reply, but merely stared at her intently, unsmiling.

"My brother is very grateful for what you did for me today," Bright Sun announced. "And so am I," she added shyly.

Grateful? He didn't look grateful. He still hadn't said a word or acknowledged her greeting; the disapproving stares of her classmates had been easier to take than this Indian boy's steady, intense gaze.

"It was nothing," Dee said dismissively, deciding not to spend any more time trying to puzzle these people out. Anthony and Rachel were waiting for her.

"It was not nothing," River Dog said suddenly, his deep voice making Dee jump. "You were punished for protecting my sister."

"Well…not really," Dee said, feeling her face getting hot. The only thing she hated worse than crying in front of people was admitting she'd screwed up. "I wasn't punished for protecting Bright Sun. I was punished for hitting Ernie."

"If you had not defended her, he would have hurt my sister," River Dog said with finality.

Dee sighed. She would dearly love to believe that because that would make Ernie's black eye more than justified, but she knew Ernie too well. "I don't think so," she said reluctantly. "Ernie's a coward, and the teacher was almost there. I just got really mad, that's all."

"You defended my sister," River Dog continued, ignoring her mea culpa, "and I came here to take your punishment in your place. But your teacher would not let me."

Good. Especially since the "punishment" had turned out to be well worth doing. "That was really nice of you," Dee said carefully, "but it's not your fault I hit him. And since it didn't work, then why did you stay?"

"We stayed to honor your sacrifice," Bright Sun said, her high voice contrasting with her brother's deep one.

Sacrifice? What sacrifice? Dee felt momentarily embarrassed as she realized how seriously Bright Sun and River Dog were taking all this. It certainly hadn't turned out to be much of a sacrifice for her. True, she'd gotten a talking to from Mr. Kagen and her Mama, and Daddy would probably have his say tonight. But one also had to factor in that wonderful, whopping black eye Ernie was sporting courtesy of her, and how good it had felt to write that "punishment" essay.

"Look," Dee said, "you're making this into a bigger deal than it is. I think those boys were beastly, and I'm glad I could help, but I wouldn't call staying after school for a few minutes a 'sacrifice'. I haven't sacrificed anything."

"Not yet, perhaps," River Dog replied seriously. "But you will."

He gave a her a very slight nod, then turned and took Bright Sun's hand. Bright Sun smiled and waved as they walked away, leaving Dee standing there absolutely thunderstruck. What did he mean, 'You will'? She 'will' what? Was something awful going to happen to her now that she'd stood up for an Indian? What could possibly happen to her that would be worse than what had happened when she'd stood up for aliens?

Still puzzling, Dee headed for the front door and around the building, where Anthony and Rachel were eagerly waiting for her.

"We saw you leave!" Rachel said excitedly. "You weren't there very long at all. Ernie's still in there. He looks furious!"

"What did Mr. Peter have you write?" Anthony wanted to know.

"Yes, what did he do to you?" Rachel asked, practically hopping from one foot to another, as Dee smiled. Being in trouble did tend to confer a certain celebrity.

The three talked all the way off the school grounds and into town, heading for their street. Anthony and Rachel were very intrigued by Mr. Peter's notion of "punishment". "That was a good quote," Rachel commented as they neared Corona's main street. "I'll have to remember that one."

"Did you see what was on Ernie's paper?" Anthony asked curiously.

Dee shook her head. "Nope. He's too far back in the row for me to see his papers."

"I'd sure like to know if Mr. Peter gave him the same quote," Anthony said thoughtfully. "I'll bet he didn't."

Talk then turned to whether or not Ernie would have actually thrown the first punch had Dee not….well, beaten him to the punch. Dee was surprised to find her friends on different sides of this issue than she would have expected.

"I don't think he would have," Anthony argued. "There were too many witnesses, and he would have gotten in too much trouble."

"You're assuming he thinks before he acts," Rachel noted. "Ernie's a coward when he's by himself, but he wasn't by himself—he had all those other boys with him, and a lot of them were older. I really thought he was going to hit you," she added to Dee. "That's why I called out that Mr. Peter was coming. That was for him, not you."

They had come abreast of Chambers' Grocery Store and stopped to admire the window. The crowds of tourists had thinned somewhat now that summer was over, but spaceships were still doing brisk business in Corona, and Mrs. Chambers's alien head cookies remained hot sellers. It really was an uncanny resemblance; for a long time, Dee had avoided even looking at those cookies because they reminded her of Valeris when she had left him, and Urza when they had watched the fireworks on Antar in her dream. But now she could look at them without feeling that nasty lump rising in her throat. Instead, she felt....empty. Like there was a hole in her life. Not a good feeling, surely, but better than it had been.

"Dee?" Rachel asked. "Is something wrong?"

With a start, Dee realized she'd had her nose pressed to the window, staring at the cookies. She shook her head and Rachel skipped onward, but Anthony was giving her one of "those" looks, where she felt like he was reading her mind. And so what? She would love to tell him the truth, if only that wouldn't mean that he would be in danger too. It had been dangerous enough just telling him about her telescope...dangerous, and wonderful.

"Let's go this way," Rachel called, heading down an alley between the five and dime and the laundromat. If they climbed the little hill behind the dumpsters in the back and cut across a few back yards, they'd shave about ten minutes off their walk. Dee hurried along behind Rachel, eager to get home to her tree house and her kitten, whom she'd named "Cleopatra" for her tendency, shared by all cats, to behave like the fabled queen of the Nile. Anthony brought up the rear.

They were almost to the end of the alley when they appeared.

Boys. Big boys. Teenaged boys, lots of them, coming from behind the buildings just ahead, slipping out from behind junk in the alley, hopping down from fire escapes overhead. Rachel, Dee, and Anthony stopped, turning in circles, finding themselves surrounded on all sides; ultimately they wound up back to back in a circle, just like they'd been at recess.

"This looks familiar," Anthony muttered.

"What do they want?" Rachel whispered. Her arm was touching Dee's, and Dee could feel her trembling.

"None of these boys were on the playground today," Anthony murmured on her other side. And he was right—these boys were high school age, too big to have been out with Dee's class. Had they gotten wind of what happened? Is this what River Dog had meant about sacrifices?

The boys had stopped advancing; they stood silently, staring at them. One of them stepped forward; Dee studied his face, and suddenly it clicked—this was the boy who had scowled at her this morning on the way into school.

"I know you," Dee said suddenly. "You were one of Denny's friends.

"Very good," the lead boy said approvingly. "You know, Denny always thought you were stupid, Proctor, but I never did. I think you're smart. Smart enough to know what really happened to Denny."

He took a step closer, and the others followed suit. "And you're not leaving here until you tell me."




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Anthony looked back and forth from Rachel to Dee in confusion. Who was this "Denny" person, and what had happened to him? And why did this teenage thug think Dee knew something about that?

All the gang members had closed in, leaving the children in a tight huddle in the middle. "What happened to Denny?" the lead thug demanded, only feet away from Dee now. "I know you know something, something you haven't told."

"Who's Denny?" Anthony whispered to Rachel, who was looking every bit as confused as he was.

"You already know what happened to Denny," Rachel said, addressing the lead thug. "Everyone knows. He got drunk at the Fourth of July festival, and then that coyote got him."

"No!" lead thug snapped, as every other thug head swiveled from side to side in unison, "that's not what happened! He wasn't that drunk, and…."

"So he was drunk," Anthony interjected. He was immediately rewarded with a fist only inches from his nose.

"Shut up!" lead thug shouted, as Anthony dutifully complied. "That's not the point! The point is, we were all at the festival when we saw you," he said, stabbing at Dee with his forefinger. "You were with that freaky guy, and Denny wanted to settle the score."

"Freaky guy?" Rachel repeated. "What freaky guy?"

"She knows who I mean," lead thug said with conviction, his arms crossed in front of him, staring at Dee.

Anthony twisted his head around to look at Dee, realizing for the first time in the past several minutes that she hadn't said anything since this Denny person's name had come up. And that was weird—Dee wasn't the silent type. She was staring at the lead thug now, looking him straight in the eye but still saying nothing, and suddenly, Anthony knew why: She did know who the thug was talking about, and for some reason, she didn't want to say so.

"Dee was with me at the festival," Rachel protested. "There wasn't any 'freaky guy'."

"Shut it!" lead thug shouted, making them all jump. "Proctor was there with the freak who attacked us at the parade. The one who threw Denny against a wall and held him there, up in the air—without touching him."

Uh-oh. Rachel still looked perplexed, but it suddenly occurred to Anthony why Dee was so silent. The Fourth of July. Right before the ship was discovered, assuming a ship had been discovered. Which sounded like a good assumption right about now.

"We saw you with the freak," lead thug went on. "Saw you playing darts. Saw you on the Ferris wheel. Saw you buying cotton candy. How touching," he added in a singsong voice. "And then when they turned the lights out for the fireworks, Denny went looking for you to settle with the freak….and we never saw him again."

Anthony watched Dee out of the corner of his eye; she was still silent, her eyes a bit wider than before. They'd been following her at that festival, and she hadn't even known. Had this Denny seen something he shouldn't have? Is this what happened to people who saw something they shouldn't? But then why was Dee still alive?

"You know what happened," lead thug said flatly to Dee. "What happened? Answer me!" he shouted, giving her a shove which would have knocked her flat if Anthony and Rachel hadn't been behind her, keeping her from tumbling.

"I said, answer me!" lead thug shouted again, raising his hands for another push. But Dee was ready for him this time, and she pushed back, hard. He was a lot bigger than she was; she didn't even manage to throw him off balance, but boy, did she ever surprise him. He gaped at her, as though watching a fly suddenly fight back.

"You're just like him!" Dee said through clenched teeth. "You threaten people, and shove them around when you don't get what you want! What's next? Are you going to smash my head into the ground too?"

"Too"? Anthony glanced at Rachel, who looked positively flabbergasted. The lead thug had a grim smile on his face, a smile of vindication.

"I knew you knew something," he grated. "I knew it. That freak killed him, didn't he. Didn't he?"

Up at the opening of the alley, a sheriff's patrol car slid slowly by, and Anthony's heart leaped. Come back! he thought fiercely, as though thoughts could fly. Come back before Dee says something that'll get her in a whole lotta trouble!

Miraculously, it did. The sheriff's cruiser backed up till it was blocking the alley, and two deputies climbed out. "Hey!" one of them called. Every head jerked up in unison.

"Osborn, is that you?" the other deputy called.

Five seconds later every thug but one was gone, disappearing out the back of the alley like water down a very wide drain. Only the lead thug was left, staring at Dee with grim determination while she stared back with pure hatred. He'd heard at least some of what he wanted to hear, and that was apparently worth risking a brush with the law.

The deputies had started down the alley, and as they drew closer, Anthony's heart sank. He didn't know the first one, but he knew the second all too well. What were the odds? Chaves County wasn't huge, but it wasn't tiny either. What were the odds that on this day, in this town, in this spot, this particular deputy would show up? The worst possible deputy to hear the tales this thug wanted to tell?

"Miss Proctor. Miss Cavuto. Mr. Evans," Deputy Valenti said, with a slight emphasis on Anthony's name. No doubt he remembered those firecrackers and flat tires all too well. "Is there a problem?"



******************************************************


Author's Note:

From White Room:

Pierce: "Delta, Colorado, 1962, Agent Lewis, the first head of this Special Unit was found dead. His internal organs had reached a temperature of 180 degrees Fahrenheit. A silver handprint was found on his chest."




Eagle Rock Military Base



Yvonne White opened the door to the observation room and silently slipped inside. Cavitt's meeting with the alien loomed, as evidenced by the boxes of artifacts being stacked outside John's door, no doubt soon to be paraded in front of him and explanations demanded. She was fairly certain none would be forthcoming, and she was very uneasy about the outcome of that. As much as John would hate to admit it, he and Major Cavitt were an awful lot alike: Both were short-tempered, egotistical, impatient pieces of work. She'd seen little of Cavitt in the last month, busy as she'd been with Dr. Pierce's tests and reading up on psychiatry, and that had suited her just fine. But Stephen had to deal with Cavitt on a regular basis, and he had told her how Cavitt was seething at the way Pierce was keeping him away from the alien. And now the General was due day after tomorrow, and Yvonne was very much afraid Cavitt was going to demand a level of cooperation that John, being John, simply wasn't going to give him on such short notice, if ever.

Noiselessly climbing the stairs, Yvonne saw the silhouette of a dark head against the light from the window. So Pierce was already here, ready to watch as his colleague usually did whenever their positions were reversed. Cavitt had practically lived in this room, watching Pierce interact with the prisoner he hadn't been allowed to come near since Ramey's last visit.

"Hello, doctor," Yvonne said, coming abreast of Pierce.

The chair swung around. "Lieutenant," an unfamiliar voice said. "How opportune. I've been wanting to speak with you."

Yvonne stared, seeing the face clearly for the first time, recognizing it. She'd seen this face many times looking down from this very window, usually with Major Cavitt's face right beside it. Prior to this, she hadn't paid a whole lot of attention; dozens of people, all of them high-ranking officers, flocked to this room to stare at the captured prize below. She'd never met any of them, as they tended to be briefed upstairs on the "public floor", and then they were in here while she was down with John. But she knew they were there, knew her every move was being watched. Thank goodness they couldn't hear anything.

The man in the chair shifted forward slightly, and now she could see the oak leaves on his shoulders. "Sir," she said, saluting automatically.

"At ease, Lieutenant," the Major said, indicating the chair next to him. "Please. Have a seat."

Yvonne sat carefully on the edge of the chair, wondering who this man was and why he wanted to talk to her. She could see him better now that her eyes had adjusted. He looked to be about mid-thirties, with dark eyes and a small smile that for some reason made her blood run cold.

"I am Major Lewis," he announced casually. "Dr. Lewis, actually, although I prefer Major."

Interesting, Yvonne thought. The exact opposite of Pierce, who preferred the title "Doctor" to "Major". "What specialty, sir?" she asked politely, a typical first question upon meeting a physician.

"Surgery," he answered.

"Surgery?" Yvonne repeated.

"That surprises you?"

"Well….I would think a surgeon would be looking at reports and x-rays," Yvonne replied, "not sitting up here."

"Oh, I've looked at those. Several times." The Major reached over and pulled a rolling trolley toward him equipped with a coffee pot, hot water kettle, teabags, milk, sugar, and assorted other foodstuffs placed here for those who came to stare through the windows. "Would you like some?" he asked, pouring hot water over a tea bag.

"No, thank you sir," Yvonne replied faintly, watching him dunk his teabag up and down.

"As I was saying, I looked at all the reports," Major Lewis continued. "Practically memorized them. Fascinating creatures. Fascinating. Especially the way they self-destruct after death. Very handy, that. For them, I mean," he added, with a smile Yvonne found not the least bit reassuring. "Makes killing them in order to study them unhelpful, which is also handy for them, I imagine. It certainly makes our job one hell of a lot harder."

Dunk Dunk. The teabag continued its rhythmic rise and fall as Yvonne felt a cold hand squeeze her heart. "Our job"—what could he mean by that? More to the point, what could a surgeon mean by that? The answer that came to mind was not pleasant, and she felt her stomach turn at the incongruity of what she suspected and what she saw before her: A well-groomed officer with a pleasant expression and neatly manicured fingernails making a perfectly civilized cup of tea, offering her a seat, a beverage, speaking to her politely—all things that he, as a senior officer, didn't have to do.

"You said you wanted to talk to me, sir?" Yvonne ventured, every nerve in her body on guard now.

"Absolutely." The teabag retreated to a waste can, its work done. "I've been watching you for quite some time now. You spend a great deal of time with the creature—you eat with it, talk with it, visit it at all hours. You're a brave woman, Lieutenant. Exceptionally brave."

"Not really," Yvonne replied, mentally thanking Dr. Pierce for maneuvering her into the position that allowed her to use the excuse she was about to use. "I was ordered to befriend him, to get to know him better. To provide a bridge between him and everyone else here. I'm simply following orders."

"Yes, yes, I remember reading about that too," Lewis answered, plunking sugar cubes into his tea. "But as I recall, you outdid yourself defending it before you were given that assignment." He paused. "Why is that?"

"As I told Major Cavitt," Yvonne said, hoping her voice wasn't shaking, "we are making history here. And history will judge us by how we conduct ourselves. I only mean to make certain our conduct is above reproach."

"You told Sheridan that?" Lewis asked, surprised, as Yvonne noted the use of the first name. He chuckled. "I should like to have seen his face. But no matter….you're right, I suppose. So tell me, Lieutenant," he went on, settling back in his chair with his teacup, "why is it you always sit in the far corner of the room when you eat with it?"

He noticed? "The men don't like being close to the prisoner," Yvonne answered. "They feel they have more time to shoot if they're further away from him." That was true, as far as it went. What she didn't add was that Stephen had helpfully spread this notion amongst his men to give her and John some breathing room to talk privately.

"Safer for them, I suppose, but not safer for you," Lewis mused. "But that does make it hard for them to overhear what you're saying, doesn't it?"

"I wouldn't know," Yvonne answered, her heart racing. "You'd have to ask them."

"I do very much mind not being able to hear anything up here," Lewis continued. "This was an operating theater, you understand; this room was only designed for people to observe surgery. The new cell will be much better equipped."

Yvonne blinked. "New…..cell, sir?"

"Didn't Major Cavitt tell you?" Lewis asked, sipping his tea. "We're building a new cell, with an observation area attached. Two rooms, actually, side by side, with one way glass so we can see it, but it can't see us. And microphones, of course, so we can hear everything too."

He was watching her closely, and Yvonne was careful to keep her face blank. Did he suspect that she was helping John? It certainly sounded that way. This new "cell" Lewis was talking about wouldn't cramp the free alien's style while he was taking her form, but it would certainly cramp hers—she wouldn't be able to say anything at all but what it would be overheard. Perhaps she'd better work on that telepathic speech.

"So, what do you talk about with the creature?" Lewis was saying. "I notice you do a great deal of talking, and it does very little. Whatever are you saying?"

"I've been telling him what Dr. Pierce plans to do next, trying to win his cooperation," Yvonne answered, which was once again true, as far as it went.

"Ah. Yes. The 'tests'," Lewis said, smiling, placing a particularly derisive emphasis on the word 'tests'. "So what is dear Dr. Pierce planning to do next? Tell it to draw pictures? Teach it the hokey pokey?"

As much as she shared Dr. Lewis's poor opinion of many of psychiatry's practices, Yvonne felt her temper rising. It was none of his business what Pierce or anyone else was planning to do next, and he knew it.

"I'm not at liberty to discuss Dr. Pierce's work," she said coolly, rising to her feet. "You should consult him directly. Permission to return to my duties, sir?"

"Permission denied," Lewis replied pleasantly. "Resume your seat, Lieutenant. Are you sure you won't have some?" he added, gesturing toward the teapot once more.

Yvonne shook her head as she stiffly retook her seat, not bothering to hide the distaste on her face.

"You are loyal," Lewis said approvingly. "I appreciate that. And I'll keep that in mind when the time comes for me to take Dr. Pierce's place. Your experience with the creature will come in handy, and I imagine you'll want to see your mission through to the end."

Yvonne's throat went so dry she could barely speak. "Take….Dr. Pierce's place, sir?"

"Oh, not right away," Lewis allowed. "But when the time comes that we've gotten all we can get from it, then the time will have come for a…..well, let's just say a different approach. I believe that time will arrive sooner than anyone thinks."

Jesus. She'd told John the stakes were higher this time, but even she hadn't expected this. Eventually, yes, but not now. Not this soon.

"But….Major Cavitt hasn't even spoken to him yet," Yvonne protested. "He may…."

"He will learn little or nothing," Lewis said firmly. "Come now, Lieutenant. You've spent a good deal more time down there than I have up here, and even from here I can see what kind of a disposition that thing has. It won't volunteer a damned thing, and Pierce's barbells and butterfly pictures won't keep people amused for long. Don't get me wrong," he added hastily, "I respect the fact that Dr. Pierce found a way to hold it. Amazing, really. The pinnacle of his career. Too bad he'll never be able to publish it. But the means by which we hold it are also the reason we'll never be able to fully study all those magical things I've heard it can do. And I'm convinced it won't willingly tell us anything about the abilities we've suppressed." He sighed dramatically. "I'd give my eyeteeth to be able to see them do what I've heard they can do. I understand you've seen some of it?"

"A little," Yvonne lied through her teeth. "Only when the first one escaped."

Lewis nodded sadly, as though a great opportunity had been lost. "A pity. But this is the only one we have left, so we'll just have to milk it for all it's worth."

"But you can't kill him," Yvonne protested. "His body will just…."

"Disintegrate. Yes, I mentioned that before," Lewis said patiently. "We'll have to keep it alive; conscious enough to speak, to respond to….incentives," he added with that small smile. "I suggested as much to Major Cavitt when this whole charade began, but Major Pierce managed to dazzle everyone with his psychology mumbo jumbo."

Yvonne's hands clenched in her lap. "General Ramey must have felt Dr. Pierce's approach was valid."

"Ramey," Lewis scoffed, shaking his head. "A soft-hearted fool. He'll figure out his mistake soon enough when he doesn't get anything of value."

"He's a highly decorated two-star General, sir," Yvonne pointed out. "I doubt either the Germans or the Japanese saw him the way you do."

"Oh, of course not," Lewis agreed. "Neither did the brass. Ramey was always big on the good treatment of prisoners, and that thrilled the bureaucrats—made us look good. It also severely cut down on the amount of information we were able to extract from the prisoners. I doubt they'll make that mistake twice."

"So," Yvonne said in a hard voice, "you object to the humane treatment of prisoners, sir?"

Lewis smiled into his teacup for a moment before setting it down. "You still sympathize with it, don't you? I respect that, Lieutenant. Given the profession you've chosen, I understand your compassion."

"Begging your pardon, sir, but I've chosen the same profession you have," Yvonne pointed out. "Haven't I?"

"No, not really," Lewis answered. "Yes, I'm a doctor, but I'm also a soldier. You are merely a nurse. You tend the sick, nothing more. I tend the wounded, but I also assess threat. And that thing down there is a threat. I don't know how you sit so close to it so much of the time. You do realize it could kill you any time it chose to, don't you?"

"With respect, sir…so could you. Perhaps I should put some distance between us?"

Lewis shook his head regretfully and leaned in toward her, causing her to instinctively draw back. "I realize it looks human, Lieutenant. I notice you refer to it as 'him' even though the x-rays, which I'm sure you've seen, indicate it is definitely not a 'him', or a 'her', or anything we've ever seen before. But you should be careful. It may look human in every respect, but it isn't. You shouldn't make the mistake of comparing our two species because there is no comparison. Appearances can be very deceiving, and that thing is a perfect example."

He sat back in his chair, glancing down at the room below. "We'll talk again soon, I'm sure. I'll need all the help you can give me when it's my turn at bat. That shouldn't be long. Dismissed."

He remained in his seat, indicating that he did not expect a salute, and Yvonne rose gratefully and headed for the door. He sounded so sure of himself, so certain that he'd be in Pierce's shoes soon that she was seized with a sudden urge to run to Pierce and warn him, despite her misgivings about his methods. But Pierce probably already knew all about this; he'd said there were others out there gunning for his job who were much worse than he was, and here was the proof.

But Lewis was right about one thing. Most likely he didn't realize, as he sat there with his neatly manicured nails, impeccable uniform, and civilized mien, that John wasn't the only perfect example of just how deceiving appearances could be.




******************************************************



Downtown Corona




The six of them stood at the base of the alley, staring at each other: Two deputies, three children, and one thug. Anthony noticed that Rachel had relaxed now that the rest of the gang had left and rescue was close at hand, but Dee hadn't. She was still locked in a fighting stance with the one referred to as "Osborn", and Deputy Valenti's eyes shifted from Dee to the thug, and back again.

"Same old, same old, huh Osborn?" the other deputy said in a conversational tone. His name tag read "Woods".

"Who is he?" Valenti asked, indicating Osborn.

"This here is Trey Osborn," Woods replied, "now the likely head of Corona's resident rabble rousers, vandals, and petty thieves. They're noted for picking pockets, breaking windows, and shaking down the little ones for their milk money. Although they usually do that before lunch," he noted. "Gettin' a head start on tomorrow, Trey?"

"She knows something," Trey said, holding his ground and pointing at Dee. "About Denny."

"Oh, good Lord," Woods muttered with a heavy sigh, his eyes rising skyward as though praying for strength. "Haven't we been over this at least a hundred times?"

"He didn't die the way you think he did!" Trey insisted.

"Oh, yes he did," Woods said. "Drunk and mauled. That about covers it."

"No, it doesn't cover it!" Trey said hotly. "She knows—ask her!"

"Who's he talking about?" Valenti asked, his eyes glinting at the reference to Dee.

"Dennis Miltnor," Woods answered, shaking his head. "You might remember that one; your name was on the report. He was the coyote death the day after Independence Day."

"And she knows more than she's telling!" Trey repeated, apparently hoping that if you said something often enough, someone would believe you. "She was there!"

Anthony waited for it, waited for Valenti to light into Dee, demanding to know what the thug was talking about. Dee was apparently expecting the same thing because he felt her tense, even though he wasn't quite touching her. Rachel just looked baffled.

But Valenti didn't do that. Instead, his face fell as if his private hopes had been dashed. "I do remember that one, son," Valenti said to Trey, "and your friend was mauled. The coroner confirmed the bite marks were coyote, and he also confirmed your friend was drunk."

"But that doesn't make sense!" Trey exploded, forgetting Dee and advancing on the deputies, who didn't move a muscle. "See, we were all at the festival, Denny and us, and she was there too"—he pointed to Dee—"and Denny went looking for her, and then he never came back!"

"Right," Woods said patiently, as though he were talking to a simpleton, "because apparently he left the grounds after he left you."

"No, he didn't!" Trey objected. "I know he didn't!"

"Did you see him after he supposedly left to find Miss Proctor?" Valenti asked.

Trey stopped, mouth open and working, but no sound coming out.

"If you didn't see him after he left you, then how do you know he didn't leave the grounds?" Valenti asked sensibly.

Trey shook his head, as though trying to rid himself of inconvenient facts. "Look, she was there…"

"Of course she was there!" Woods snapped irritably. "What is that supposed to prove? The whole damned town was there! Everybody in Corona goes to that festival unless they're sick, or too old, or out of town. So Dee was there, I was there, you were there, Denny was there, the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker were there—everyone was there."

"But the freak was there too!" Trey said triumphantly. "And I bet he wanted to finish what he started earlier!"

"What freak?" Valenti asked sharply, as Anthony's heart rate tripled again.

"He means Bill Chambers's handyman," Woods said wearily. "I've heard all this before."

"Why are you calling the handyman a 'freak'?" Valenti asked Trey, who opened his mouth to answer as Anthony's heart sank to his toes. Here it comes, he thought. It was all going to get repeated right here, right in front of Valenti. Everything Dee wouldn't want Valenti to hear.

"He…" Trey began.

"He apparently interfered with an annual Corona tradition," Woods interrupted, as Anthony practically sagged into Rachel with relief. "Miltnor's gang always filched food from the food stalls during the parade, and I guess they decided to go right to the source this time, namely the truck that Bill's handyman was driving that was delivering the food. And I gather that handyman didn't know what a big shot Miltnor thought he was, and drove him off. That right, Dee?"

Valenti's head swung around sharply. "You were there?"

Dee nodded slightly, so slightly Anthony would have missed it if he hadn't been looking right at her. She still hadn't so much as opened her mouth since the thugs had appeared.

"Bill and a bunch of others showed up right after the altercation, and Miltnor was fine," Woods continued. "Not a scratch on'im. All that handyman did was hurt his pride."

"But that's not true!" Trey protested. "He held him……"

"Look, son, you're just going to have to accept the fact that Denny went and did something stupid…and not for the first time, I might add," Woods said, cutting off Trey once again. "He went to the festival, got himself drunk, and then he must have wandered off and tangled with a coyote."

"That freak did something to him," Trey muttered sullenly. "I know it."

This time it was Valenti who shook his head, once again with a tinge of regret as though he'd hoped he'd found something more exciting. "Nope. There were no signs of foul play. No signs of anything but coyote bite marks. I'm afraid only Denny is to blame for Denny's death."

"Nobody listens to me!" Trey muttered, stuffing his hands into his pockets. "They wouldn't even let me make a statement!"

"Of course we didn't," Woods said sharply. "You came to us two weeks after he died with all these wild tales, no evidence, no witnesses, nothing. What the hell took you so long?"

"I didn't put it all together until then," Trey mumbled.

"Well, I can believe that," Woods said dryly. "Look, I'm sorry about Denny, but…"

"No you're not," Trey said darkly. "Nobody is." He shoved past the deputies and headed up the alley, toward the main road, slamming his fists on the sheriff's cruiser as he walked past it.

"Whose fault is that?" Woods murmured. He sighed, and shook his head. "Honestly, these punks think they're invulnerable."

Valenti nodded in agreement, and Anthony cautiously allowed himself to start breathing again. Nothing had been said within Valenti's earshot about anything weird, and Valenti himself had admitted that this Denny person had died from a coyote, not from anything strange. Hopefully Rachel would just write it all off to the thugs telling tales. For his own part, he seriously suspected they weren't.

"C'mon kids," Deputy Woods was saying. "Into the car. I'll give you a ride home."

"Great!" Rachel enthused, bolting for the cruiser. But Anthony hesitated, and so did Dee; neither of them wanted to get into a car with Valenti. Fortunately, he solved that problem for them.

"I'll hang around on foot," Valenti said to Woods, "just to make sure that bunch isn't pulling anything else. Swing by and pick me up after you've dropped the children off, will you?"

"Good idea," Woods agreed, herding the three of them toward the car.

"We'll be keeping an eye out to make sure this doesn't happen again," Valenti assured them all, but only Rachel looked relieved. Anthony couldn't deny that the deputies had been helpful, but the notion of Valenti "keeping an eye out" was disturbing, to say the least. He caught Dee's eye as she walked toward the cruiser, and he knew she was thinking the same thing.

The last thing they saw as the cruiser pulled away was Valenti waving goodbye to them, and for some reason, Anthony found that sight disturbing.



******************************************************



Trey Osborn shuffled down Corona's main street, scowling and looking for the cowards who'd deserted him when those asinine deputies had shown up. His buddies only cared about Denny when it was convenient—the minute it became inconvenient, they booked. He planned to beat the crap out of a few of them to drive home the point that caring about other members of the gang took precedence over cutting and running. Denny hadn't been any fairy godmother, but he was loyal; had it been anyone else who'd died, Denny'd have stuck by them till he figured out who did it. And that's just what Trey planned to do. Just because Denny was poor and ornery and got in trouble sometimes didn't give anyone the right to murder him.

Hanging a left, Trey headed down a different alley. He'd only taken three steps before hands grabbed him, shoving him up against the stone wall in a gesture eerily reminiscent of that freaky handyman shoving Denny against the wall. Was he back? Trey had been looking for the freak ever since Denny had died, but he hadn't seen him anywhere—the guy had simply vanished. Had he come back to finish off the rest of them so they wouldn't tell what he'd done?

But there were hands on Trey's shoulders, unlike the handyman, who hadn't ever touched Denny, and the hands belonged to Deputy Valenti. "Lemme go!" Trey barked, struggling to free himself. "I didn't do nothin'! I never touched those little twerps!"

"Shut up and listen to me!" Valenti hissed, pinning him against the wall. Trey stopped struggling, panting. Valenti relaxed his grip somewhat.

"Now, Mr. Osborn, I believe that every citizen has the right to file a report when they feel they've seen something that isn't right," Valenti said, looking Trey directly in the eyes. "So right here, right now, I'm going to take your report about what happened the day of the festival and that night when Denny was killed. Are you prepared to give me that report, Mr. Osborn?"

Trey's eyes widened, first with shock, then with vindication. Finally. Finally, someone was going to listen to him. Finally, something would be done about that handyman.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I'll post Chapter 33 next Sunday. :)
BRIVARI: "In our language, the root of the word 'Covari' means 'hidden'. I'm always there, Your Highness, even if you don't see me."
User avatar
Kathy W
Obsessed Roswellian
Posts: 690
Joined: Thu Oct 31, 2002 5:06 am

Post by Kathy W »

Hello to everyone reading! *wave*

Misha: I'm so sorry I missed your feedback last week! We must have been posting at the same time, and I didn't check when I did the final post.

So WWII is more interesting now? ;) I grew up hearing about WWII. My parents were high-school aged during the war--my father graduated and went right into the Navy. Fortunately, the war ended shortly after that, or I may not have been here. Dad lost a brother to the war, and Mom always talks about how weird it was to go to school when all the boys were gone. Their graduating class was only half the size it should have been because all the boys 18 or over had been drafted. My mother's brother came home from the war to find his wife pregnant with another man's child, and the Catholic church wouldn't give him an annulment because he didn't "have any witnesses to the infidelity". (Um--can they count? Given the timing, he couldn't possibly have been the father.) I heard it all--the rationing, and the stars in the windows, and you name it. Kinda nice to be using it now. I figured since the country had just come out of WWII, their reaction to the aliens might very well be colored by their experiences.

Both of my sons have really small handwriting. :mrgreen: Or should I say printing? They prefer to print. (Actually, they prefer to type everything.) My younger one says he "writes for mice". LOL!

I remember running across those inkblots somewhere, and just rolling my eyes. Those are still used for child custody cases and such. Unbelievable.




CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE


September 3, 1947, 1630 hours

Eagle Rock Military Base





Footsteps.

Jaddo lay on the bed in his cell, one arm over his eyes, listening to the footsteps. There were approximately seven or eight separate pairs of footsteps heading toward this room, all but one wearing the same type of footwear. Over the past several weeks, with hours spent alone here with nothing to do, Jaddo had grown quite adept at identifying footsteps. Different types of footwear and different gaits made different patterns that his excellent Covari hearing could differentiate.

For example, there were three types of footwear worn in this compound. Most of the soldiers wore boots, with thick, heavy soles that echoed with a hollow thud. Differentiating these was the most difficult because there were so many. The high-ranking officers wore thin, hard-soled shoes that slapped noisily on the flooring material. Usually this meant Pierce or Cavitt, or one of the endless stream of visiting officers that paraded past the window in the observation room above.

And then there was the footwear worn by only one here, the soft-soled shoes the Healer wore. Hearing that sound meant either she or Brivari in her form was on their way. In the early days Jaddo had been able to discern the Healer from Brivari by the differences in gait, but Brivari had been working on that after Jaddo had mentioned it in conversation. Not that any of the humans would have noticed—Brivari's approximation of the Healer's gait was certainly close enough to pass visual muster—but the ability to fool another Covari was much more difficult, and considered a matter of pride. Brivari's improved "Healer's gait" was much harder to detect than the real thing, but there was still one tiny glitch that gave it away. He hadn't told Brivari that yet, of course. When one was as bereft of amusements as Jaddo was, one guarded them cautiously.

The footsteps came closer. Jaddo listened carefully, feeling the vibrations in the floor. Six—no, seven—different people, all but one wearing boots. He directed his senses to the odd one out, and smiled at his discovery: Thin, hard-soled shoes, brand news ones based on a comparison with previous pairs, that made an arrogant slap on the floor as they advanced. There was a slight hesitation in the gait that hadn't been there before, but that was probably due to the newness of the footwear. Pierce's gait was much quieter, more confident, so this could only mean one thing: It was Cavitt who approached, with a small army in tow from the sounds of it. The day's amusement could begin.

Jaddo sat up when he heard voices just outside his door, and the locks rattle as they were thrust aside. The door opened and two soldiers entered the room. Ignoring Jaddo, they moved to the rectangular table in the corner where he ate his meals and pulled it to the center of the room, turning it lengthwise and setting one chair at either end. Then the nearest soldier turned to Jaddo and raised his weapon.

"Sit!" he ordered.

Well. This was different. At least Pierce had some manners. Still, it was only to be expected, and it really didn't matter because Jaddo was looking forward to this encounter so much. True, Pierce was fun to bait, but he had more self-control than Cavitt. Cavitt had the quicker temper, and that made him more fun.

So Jaddo obligingly rose from the bed and took a seat in the chair. The soldier brandishing the weapon continued to keep it trained on him, while the second soldier disappeared into the hallway. Moments later Major Cavitt entered followed by five soldiers, the one who had just left and four more. Two remained by the door, while the other four took up positions around the table, roughly one at each corner, but far enough away that it would be a stretch for him to reach them. How brave, Jaddo thought derisively. Pierce never entered with more than the requisite two guards who always remained by the door, and he had no qualms about sitting near Jaddo. His colleague was a coward.

Cavitt completely ignored him, setting a stack of papers a foot thick on the opposite end of the table and snapping his fingers toward the door. What…..more soldiers? But these were toting boxes which they arrayed on the table and floor around Cavitt, and Jaddo could see they contained artifacts from the ship. Most of it was twisted metal and other debris, but there were occasional exceptions; he saw some eating utensils in one box, what looked like a piece of the navigation console in another, and in yet a third, a communicator, rolling on top of the rest of the contents, tantalizingly close. Unfortunately he wouldn't be able to summon even the low level of energy necessary to activate the communicator because of that damned serum, and besides, there was one Brivari could use in the pod chamber if need be. Eventually the hybrids would need both, but that was far in the future. There would be plenty of time to retrieve the one in the box.

Cavitt took a seat at the far end of the table, still studiously ignoring him. Jaddo watched as he rifled through his papers, organizing them into little stacks, and removed several objects from the boxes and set them on the table. He and Brivari had already discussed what would happen when this time came. They had both agreed there was little danger here due to the humans' low level of technology and the damage their ship had sustained. Even were he to give them genuine information about technology or materials they currently did not possess, it was highly unlikely they'd be able to use that knowledge any time soon. Jaddo fully intended to string this out as long as possible, at first denying information, then dribbling out bits of it and watching the humans struggle to make some kind of sense of it. Such an approach served the purposes of providing Brivari with more time and Jaddo with more amusement. God knows he had little enough of that these days.

"So," Jaddo said, breaking the silence first. "I see Pierce let you off your leash. That must be a relief for you."

Cavitt's eyes flicked upward as he continued to organize his belongings, but he said nothing. Overhead two faces loomed in the observation room window: Pierce's and one other, one Jaddo had seen many times before, but never met. Pierce looked worried, the other……hungry.

"I see you have new shoes," Jaddo observed, planning to astound Cavitt with personal information just as he had Pierce. "I gather your feet hurt."

He was rewarded with only the slightest twitch of the jaw; a disappointment, really, given previous wildly successful attempts to annoy. Cavitt did look at him now, though, sitting bolt upright in his chair and folding his hands on the table in front of him.

"Let me save us both some time," Cavitt said, his voice calm and steely. "I am Major Sheridan Cavitt, the officer in charge of gathering intelligence for this operation. I owe my latest promotion to you and yours, and extend my gratitude. I drive a black vehicle, parked one space to the west of the front door to this compound, I carry my keys in my pocket, not my briefcase, and I arrive between 6 and 6:30 each morning. My shoes fit well, thank you, and it is milk, not coffee, which make me dyspeptic. Have I left anything out?"

Jaddo's eyebrows rose. So his recital of Pierce's personal information had reached this one's ears, and he was ready. That was too bad, but not of great consequence. There were still myriad ways to annoy this man, and he intended to avail himself of as many as possible before telling him a blessed thing.

"Now let me tell you something you might not be aware of," Cavitt continued, in that same calm, ice cold tone. "I am your interrogator; you are my prisoner. I do not pretend to be your doctor, like Pierce, or your friend, like General Ramey. I have no interest in 'learning about your people', 'establishing a rapport', or any other such nonsense. I want to know who you are, why you're here, and what you were planning to do to the people of this planet when we so fortuitously stopped you. And you are going to tell me what I want to know. Here. Now. Is that clear?"

"And if I refuse?" Jaddo asked, not bothering to keep the amusement out of his tone.

"Then I will order my men to shoot," Cavitt replied promptly. He nodded to the soldier on his left, and the four surrounding the table raised their weapons as one and pointed them straight at Jaddo.

"Those are tranquilizer weapons," Jaddo noted casually. "Is that supposed to be some kind of threat?"

"Perhaps now would be a good time to remind you that General Ramey is due here the day after tomorrow," Cavitt replied, still in complete—and annoying—control of his temper. "One dart will put you out for approximately 24 hours; surely your 'superior' race is capable of doing the math for more than one dart. If you are unconscious, you will not be able to plead your case to the General. Others will have to speak on your behalf." He paused. "Is that your preference?" he added softly. "One never can tell how well one will be represented…..can one?"

Why, that little…… Jaddo's hand clenched under the table, where Cavitt wouldn't see it. This little twit was proving to be a bigger pain then expected.

"Perhaps now would be a good time for me to remind you that if you sedate me, you learn nothing," Jaddo said, matching Cavitt's cold tone. "Sedate me, and you lose."

"Agreed. But if you are refusing to answer my questions, I am 'losing' anyway. Sedating you will not make the situation any worse from my perspective. And sedating you will prevent anyone else from obtaining information from you. If I don't profit from your being conscious, I will see to it that no one else does either. Including you."

"Your General would be most unhappy to find me unconscious when he gets here," Jaddo said, finding it a real effort to keep his own temper. Here he'd been looking forward to making Cavitt lose his, and now he was struggling with his own. "Do you really want to risk the displeasure of your commanding officer?"

"General Ramey has forbidden me to deny you food, water, shelter, or medical care," Cavitt replied. "He has forbidden me to harm you, or threaten to harm you. Sedating you is not harmful. It is the one thing I am allowed to do, and I always use any means at my disposal to get what I want. As do you, I would imagine."

Silence descended as Jaddo discreetly fumed. Much as he hated to admit it, Cavitt was right; if he were sedated when the General showed up, things would look very bad for him indeed. Cavitt would be able to make up all sorts of wild stories about being threatened or attacked just like he'd done with Valeris, and there would be no one to contradict him except these six soldiers, all of whom likely wouldn't dare speak against their commander.

Cavitt waited patiently, his hands still folded neatly on the table in front of him, his expression blank. No…not quite blank. Now there was just the tiniest flicker of something downright infuriating—triumph. He'd outmaneuvered Jaddo, and he knew it.

But he wasn't going to win that easily, not if Jaddo could help it. "I don't speak with people who are pointing weapons at me," Jaddo said. "Tell them to lower their weapons, or I say nothing."

Cavitt broke into a smile, as though he had been expecting this. "Oh, no you don't. I'm not Ramey. I am in command here, and I say what happens."

"Then shoot," Jaddo said, shrugging. "Throw away your first chance to learn what you want to know without having ever asked a single question."

"Ready," Cavitt ordered, his expression hardening. Jaddo said nothing. The soldiers shifted slightly.

"Aim!" Cavitt ordered.

"They're already aiming, you idiot," Jaddo said sarcastically. "They've been aiming for the past three minutes. You could have skipped the drama and just said 'fire'." He leaned forward in his chair. "You're not going to shoot, and you know it. Imagine having nothing to present to the General but me, unconscious, when Pierce has reams of data I've given him willingly. How will that look?" He turned to the nearest soldier. "Why wait? Go ahead—shoot!"

The soldier's eyes flicked back and forth from Jaddo to Cavitt, who was now visibly scowling. Good. If he had accomplished nothing else, at least he'd managed to wipe that look of triumph off his face.

"Stand down," Cavitt ordered grimly.

Jaddo secretly relaxed, allowing himself the same expression of satisfaction that Cavitt had recently been wearing. He'd won round one, but he'd had to actually work for it.

Perhaps this wasn't going to be as much fun as he'd hoped.



******************************************************



Chambers Grocery

Corona, New Mexico





Deputy Valenti entered Chamber's Grocery, dingling the little bell at the top of the door as it closed. Bill was at the counter, and Valenti breathed a sigh of relief; the last thing he needed was to get Esertine's mouth flapping about the subject at hand.

"Afternoon, Deputy!" Bill called, as he waved goodbye to another customer.

"Jim," Valenti said, extending his hand. "Call me Jim."

"All right then, Jim," Bill answered, accepting the handshake. "How's things down at the station? You're still on loan from Roswell, so I take it our boys still need help?"

"Bunch of 'em quit," Valenti said, leaning against the counter. "Folks are still pretty worked up, seeing an alien around every corner. I must admit it does get tiresome."

"I'll bet," Bill said sympathetically. "So what brings you in? Need something?"

"As a matter of fact, I do," Valenti said, tapping his hat in his hand. "I'd like to know what you remember about the handyman you hired last Fourth of July. The one who supposedly attacked Denny Miltnor."

"Hmph!" Bill snorted. "About time somebody did. I was mighty appreciative that he kept those thieves away from my merchandise, I can tell you that. Even if I never did see him again."

"You never saw him again? I thought he was new."

"He was new. Started that morning. Came late—found'em out with the truck, sittin' in the cab as though he expected the food to just sprout legs and load itself." He chuckled. "Not too bright, some of these guys, you know."

"So he started that day, worked that morning, and then…what? Quit?"

"Nope," Bill said, shaking his head. "Disappeared. Never saw him again."

"Really?" Valenti said in surprise. "Isn't that odd?"

"Wish it were. Handymen come and go like flies around here. Half of'em never show up for work in the first place, and half of those that do disappear without saying a word. It's not unusual, just damned aggravating."

"Can you tell me what he looked like?"

"About five foot nine or ten, brown hair, mid-thirties."

"Got a name?"

"Maybe," Bill said doubtfully, glancing toward the back room. "Essie holds on to a lot of junk for months back in the office. She might have the scrap of paper that I wrote his name down on back there somewhere. I could look if you'd like."

"I'd appreciate that," Valenti said, smiling. "So this handyman showed up late, and then what?"

"Loaded up the truck and took it downtown, like I asked him to. Dee Proctor went with him to show him the way."

Did she now? Valenti thought with satisfaction. "And what happened downtown?"

"Well, bunch of us heard a commotion, and some of Miltnor's gang came charging up, saying Denny was being attacked. So we went running, and we come around the corner to find Miltnor up against a wall holding his throat, with the rest of his gang and the handyman and Dee just standing there, staring at him."

"He held out his hand, and I felt like somebody punched me in the stomach," Trey Osborn had said. "Next thing I knew, I was flat on my back on the ground. Nobody went near him after that."

"So the handyman was choking Miltnor?"

Bill shook his head. "Nope. Wasn't even near him."

"How close?"

"Ten yards—maybe fifteen."

"He raised his hand, and Denny flew back and hit the wall. And then he kept his hand out, and Denny just hung there, flat against the wall, his feet dangling, acting like he was choking. But the freak never touched him!"

"Was Miltnor okay?"

"Sure he was," Bill said with disgust. "Not a scratch on'im. He sure as hell got off better than I usually do; they steal me blind every Fourth and get away with it because no one ever sees'em."

"What about his friends?" Valenti said, careful to sound casual. "Any of them hurt?"

"Nah. They all went on about the handyman attacking all of them without touchin'em, or some such rot. Nobody paid any attention. These are classic bullies, Jim; they go around threatening everybody and their mother, and the minute anyone stands up to them, they cry foul. They were just mad somebody actually beat'em back, that's all."

"Anybody ask Dee Proctor what happened?"

"Sure we did. She said Miltnor and company tried to steal food from the truck, and the handyman stopped them."

"Did she say how?"

Bill thought for a minute. "No….no, she didn't. And nobody asked, because as I said, there wasn't a scratch on'em. No bloody noses, or bruises, or anything."

"But you said Miltnor was holding his throat. Were there any marks on his throat?"

"Not that I could see," Bill said, sighing. "What difference does it make? This is the first time in years that lot haven't robbed me. I don't care what the handyman did, just so long as he did it!"

"So then what happened?"

Bill shrugged. "I gave him a dollar. Told him he could come back and load up a couple of boxes of food because Dee said he was hungry."

Valenti blinked in surprise. "A whole dollar? And two boxes of food? That's mighty generous of you, Bill."

"Well, he did me a mighty good turn."

"How did the girl know he was hungry?"

"I don't know," Bill said, thinking. "He didn't talk much, that handyman. Didn't even squeak before he left for the parade, and didn't say much even after the Miltnor incident. Dee did most of the talking for him. Said he was shy."

"And how would she know that if she'd never met him before?"

"Eh, lots of people are more comfortable around kids than adults," Bill said dismissively. "I think those two just hit it off, that's all."

I'll bet they did, Valenti thought. "So you say you never saw the handyman again?"

"Nope."

"Did he steal anything?"

"Nope."

"Threaten anybody?"

"Only Miltnor, and he had it coming."

"Right. Anything unusual about him at all?"

Bill thought for a minute. "Well, he showed up for work in a suit. Can you believe it—a suit! But then he had overalls on down at the parade, so he must have had a change of clothes with him. And he didn't talk much…I mentioned that already, but that's nothing."

"You said he did say something after the dust-up with Miltnor. What'd he say?"

"That Mitnor had threatened the girl. And that he'd never laid a hand on them. And…."

"And what?"

"Well, it was odd, the way he put it," Bill said slowly. "He said, 'I protect. That's what I do'."

Valenti felt his blood run cold. "I protect." What did the handyman protect? Nothing on this planet, he was sure of that.

"I know where you're going with this, Jim," Bill said suddenly.

"Oh? Where's that?"

Glancing around to make certain no customers were close by, Bill leaned over the counter. "It's okay," he said, winking at Valenti. "We've all been there. I think just about everyone in town has had at least one time where they looked at a stranger and asked themselves the same question. You're not the only one....Deputy Martian."

Valenti plastered a smile on his face and struggled to keep it there. Damn that Emily Proctor! Thanks to her deliberately uttering that nickname in front of Bill's wife, it had begun to make the rounds around town. He hadn't heard it much yet, but he'd heard it enough to know that any attempt he made to prove that what he knew had crashed on that ranch actually existed would be met with titters and grins. He really had to hand it to Emily, however reluctantly—she knew how to fight dirty.

"I've been in your shoes," Bill continued, smiling. "Wondered the same thing myself for awhile. Now that handyman was a little strange, I'll grant you, but he looked just like you and me; he wasn't an alien. I've had far stranger, believe me. And even if he was an alien….well, then, I say fine. He did good by me. I'd hire him back in an instant. If that's what the aliens are like, I'll roll out the Welcome Wagon."

"I don't think he's an alien, Bill," Valenti said, smiling indulgently. "I just got an earful from one of Miltnor's friends who think the handyman had something to do with his death, and I'm trying to catch up, that's all."

"Denny's death?" Bill snorted. "He was killed by a coyote, and he was falling-down drunk to boot! And the handyman had human teeth, not coyote teeth, and I'd imagine the coroner can tell the difference. I'm afraid whoever told you that has been on the sauce."

"Probably. Thanks for your time," Valenti said, plopping his hat back on his head and extending his hand. "Oh, and just so we can close this for good, I be much obliged if you could get me that handyman's name. I'd like to look him up and ask him a few questions."

"Will do," Bill said, pumping his hand before turning his attention to a customer.

Valenti walked out into the late afternoon heat, his mind rolling through the bucket load of information he'd just received. "And the handyman had human teeth, not coyote teeth, and I'd imagine the coroner can tell the difference." Very true. But it had been a coyote who had stopped him the night he'd tried to find out what the Proctors were dragging out of that culvert on Warner's Creek. Did that mean they could look like animals? Or maybe they had some control over animals, some way to make them do their bidding? Could it be a coincidence that there were two incidents of what appeared to be alien activity closely associated with coyotes? Despite Bill's level of comfort with his "handyman", his story and Osborn's matched at all they key points. Shoving people to the ground without touching them wasn't normal, nor was that thing he'd seen in his back seat when he'd looked in his rear view mirror that night at Warner's Creek.

A sheriff's cruiser rounded the corner and stopped, as Tom Woods leaned out the window and waved. Valenti waved back and climbed in the passenger side, never letting on what he'd been up to. The last thing he needed right now was one more person calling him "Deputy Martian."



******************************************************



Eagle Rock Military Base




Cavitt laced his fingers together, elbows propped on the table. "Let's begin again, shall we?"

Groaning inwardly, Jaddo rolled his eyes. "By all means, lets, since you didn't get it the first twenty times. I understand you're slow."

"State your name," Cavitt demanded, ignoring him.

They'd been at this for the past several hours, the same questions in the same order, over and over and over again. These were inevitably followed by a procession of items from the various boxes which Jaddo was ordered to identify. Ironically, everything he had thus far been asked to identify wasn't identifiable per se; the items currently on the table were merely pieces, either of the ship or of the various command consoles on the bridge, information which Jaddo did not currently feel disposed to give. He meant to see to it that Cavitt would have to work for his precious information.

Not that Jaddo wasn't 'working' also. Apparently Cavitt felt that if he repeated the same questions often enough, Jaddo would eventually answer just to shut him up, and he had to admit the idea had merit. He'd thought being alone in one room was tedium beyond belief, but he was wrong: This was worse. Right about now, even one of those inkblots would look fascinating.

"Your name," Cavitt repeated. That was always question number one.

"Your General gave me a name. Use that."

"No, your real name."

"Irrelevant."

"What is the name of your home planet?" This was always question number two.

"Equally irrelevant," Jaddo said irritably. "Honestly, do humans always ask such stupid questions? What does it matter to you what my planet is called? You haven't even learned to leave your own planet, much less reach anyone else's. My planet's name is every bit as useless to you as my own."

"I will sit here all day and all night if I have to, but you will tell me the name of your home planet!" Cavitt said angrily.

"Incredible," Jaddo deadpanned, "that you, of all people, would be put in charge of gathering intelligence. I gather possessing intelligence of your own is not a prerequisite for the position?"

"Why did you come here?" Cavitt demanded, moving along to question number three as his face turned a gratifying shade of red.

"We didn't 'come here'. Our ship crashed."

"No."

Jaddo blinked. This hadn't been part of the script. " 'No'? No what? Our ship didn't crash? Surely even your minimal visual acuity couldn't have missed the damage to our ship."

"You came here deliberately, and I demand to know why!" Cavitt shouted.

The soldier nearest him flinched slightly, so slightly no one else had likely noticed it. Jaddo stared across the table at his nemesis, feeling a warm glow of satisfaction. Cavitt was beginning to lose his temper. He had held onto it well so far, so well that Jaddo had come dangerously close to losing his own. But now Cavitt's perceived lack of success was beginning to wear at him, and the cracks were beginning to show. Perhaps he'd be able to have some fun after all.

"And on what do you base this assumption?" Jaddo asked.

"You emptied your ship," Cavitt announced. "Why would you do that if you came here by accident?" He leaned in closer. "Where did you put the weapons?"

"I told you, we didn't have any weapons," Jaddo repeated for the umpteenth time. "It's a cargo ship."

"Then where's the cargo?"

"Already delivered. We had cargo, we delivered it, and now the ship is empty," Jaddo said sarcastically. "Do try to keep up."

"Delivered where?"

"A place as inaccessible to you as my home planet."

Cavitt sat back in his chair and stared for a moment. "Not all of it was 'delivered'," he said finally.

"Meaning?"

Cavitt removed a photograph from one of the piles of papers in front of him and handed it to the nearest soldier, who passed it to the soldier nearest Jaddo, who handed it to him, pulling his hand back quickly as Jaddo's reached out to take it.

"A dead body. Fascinating," Jaddo said in a bored tone. "So now every dead human you run across is my fault?"

"That's not just any dead human," Cavitt said stonily. "That one died in a most unusual way. He appeared to have, for lack of a better term, spontaneously combusted. No one could figure it out. Until, that is, you and yours chose to kill several soldiers in the same manner."

Jaddo was silent, waiting. They had killed only one before being discovered, so he knew where this was going.

"This man was a truck driver," Cavitt continued. "His truck was stolen three days before the discovery of your ship, along with its contents; he was killed and his body hidden in a dumpster. The next night another truck was stolen, along with the goods inside. That driver was killed too."

Liar, Jaddo thought sourly. Only the first driver had been killed; the goods had been removed unharmed and the trucks returned before sun-up. But saying so would incriminate himself, and Cavitt knew it.

"Are you suggesting we've hidden two trucks on our ship?" Jaddo asked. "I should think even you would have found them by now." Cavitt's jaw gave another gratifying twitch. "Theft is common on your planet," Jaddo continued. "It sounds like these men were killed for their possessions. None of their possessions could have been found on our ship because we didn't take them, so what does this have to do with us?"

"Do you know what I think?" Cavitt asked.

"Frankly, I doubt you waste much time on that particular endeavor," Jaddo replied blandly.

"I think," Cavitt continued, still keeping a grip on his temper although his temple had begun to throb in an encouraging fashion, "that you came here on purpose. You've been coming here for years. Reports of ships similar to yours have been piling up for at least the last decade, along with eyewitness accounts of people who say they've been abducted and experimented on. You know so much about us, our language, our dress, our customs because you've been studying us for years. Yes, your ship crashed, but that was your fault—you are here because you meant to be here. You emptied your ship of whatever you brought here and hid it somewhere."

"I see," Jaddo said, eyebrows raised. "Since you seem to be enjoying this little tale you've concocted, I can't wait to hear the ending. What is it, exactly, that we're supposed to be hiding?"

"You know," Cavitt continued. "What we found on your ship, what we used as bait the night the first one was captured. What you stole and have no doubt hidden somewhere close by. You hadn't time to move them far."

The hybrids. Cavitt's eyes were boring into him as Jaddo carefully kept his expression blank. "I don't know what you're talking about," he said calmly.

"You do!" Cavitt exclaimed suddenly, rising from his chair and banging his fist on the table, startling everyone in the room except Jaddo. "Where did you put them?"

"Where did I put what?"

"Don't play games with me!" Cavitt shouted, now officially enraged. "You have them! You've hidden them! Why? When will they be born?"

"I haven't the faintest idea what you're talking about," Jaddo replied, as the soldiers in the room cast nervous glances at one another.

"That's how you're planning to invade us, isn't it?" Cavitt said with grim satisfaction, nodding his head as if to convince himself. "They'll look like us, so we won't be able to tell. You probably have hundreds—no, thousands—of them out there somewhere, and they'll infiltrate the population and take us over before we even know what's happening!"

Interesting, Jaddo mused. He and Brivari had often wondered why no one had mentioned the hybrids, and here was another example; for all his bluster, Cavitt was stopping just short of saying exactly what they'd found. He hasn't told anyone, Jaddo realized with satisfaction. Cavitt had lost one of the most important things they'd captured, and he didn't want anyone to know. But he knew—he knew there were at least eight human-appearing fetuses out there floating in alien sacs, and in his narrow little mind, this constituted an invasion.

"So it's invasion you fear," Jaddo said, "so much so that you're actually inventing methods by which we could accomplish this? Let me tell you something, you blithering idiot. If my people had any interest in 'invading' this pathetic world of yours, we wouldn't need to 'infiltrate the population', or hide amongst you, or employ any other such stealthy measures. Tactics such as those are only called for when one is facing a superior enemy."

Cavitt promptly turned purple. Excellent. The fun was finally beginning.

"No, if my people decided to 'invade', they would crush you swiftly and decisively. If you keep up this nonsense, when the times comes that they find me here, they may decide to do just that....and you would be helpless to resist."

"Why you……!" Bolting from his seat, Cavitt traversed the length of the table with amazing speed for a human and grabbed Jaddo by the front of his shirt, pulling them nose to nose with each other. The soldiers reached for their weapons in alarm, but Jaddo didn't bother to struggle—Cavitt's grip was weak by Covari standards, and besides, the contest was over. In the battle to see who was capable of holding their temper the longest, there was now a clear winner. And a clear loser.

"Well, well," Jaddo said softly, smiling because he knew it would infuriate Cavitt more. "So there is something capable of prying you from your safe little seat over there, at a safe distance, surrounded by your guards, afraid to even pass me a piece of paper. Imagine that."

"Where….are…..they?" Cavitt ground out.

"Careful, there, Major," Jaddo said. "You wouldn't want to muss your uniform."

"Where are they?" Cavitt shouted. The guards had paused with their hands on their weapons, having not yet received an order to draw them.

"Where are what?" Jaddo asked innocently. He couldn't believe his good fortune. He had expected Cavitt to get mad and storm out; actually being attacked was better than he could have hoped for.

"You know what," Cavitt whispered furiously. "Answer me!"

He looked so pathetic that Jaddo decided to give him something. Not much, mind you, but a little something. A parting gift. Leaning in closer until their heads were nearly touching, he whispered, "Somewhere you'll never find them."

Cavitt's face contorted. Shoving Jaddo violently back into the chair, he released his grip and stepped back, breathing hard.

"Answer me, or I'll tell the men to fire."

"Do that, and you only hurt yourself," Jaddo replied.

"Negative. You haven't given me a damned thing anyway."

"I answered your questions, Major," Jaddo said levelly. "I just didn't give you the answers you wanted to hear."

"Ready!" Cavitt said firmly.

There was an awkward pause as the guards in the room exchanged glances.

"I said ready!" Cavitt shouted.

Four guns rose in unison, the eyes of those wielding them round as platters.

"You're going to shoot me while I'm just sitting here?" Jaddo said calmly, not believing for a moment that Cavitt was actually going to go through with it.

"Aim!" Cavitt ordered.

Jaddo shook his head regretfully. "I doubt your General will be pleased."

"I'll give you one more chance to answer me," Cavitt said, his voice quivering with rage. "Where did you hide them?"

"Hide what?"

Cavitt's expression changed to one of satisfaction.

"Fire!"



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I'll post Chapter 34 next Sunday. :)
BRIVARI: "In our language, the root of the word 'Covari' means 'hidden'. I'm always there, Your Highness, even if you don't see me."
User avatar
Misha
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 425
Joined: Thu Jun 20, 2002 10:44 am
Location: Guatemala City, Guatemala

Post by Misha »

"They're already aiming, you idiot,"
HAHAHAHAHA :lol: :lol: Gosh, there aren't the right smilies in this board to express how much I laughed at that line!! You almost got me in tears in here! I knew the whole scene was going to be tense, but I was never expecting something like -although that was so Jaddo- to make me double up on my chair :D :D

I gotta admit that it was surprising that Cavitt could manage so well for such period of time, not letting Jaddo get into him that fast. But then again, with Jaddo's temper and giving the circumstances, something was bound to happen.

It totally creeped me out the whole scene with Danny's friends, but what made me go cold, of course, was Valenti returning to see how things had really gone... Just when you think that things are long past and forgotten, bam! Someone comes to screw things up! You are a genius!!!

I do wonder if this insident is going to make Anthony brake his "don't ask don't tell" promise, because things could really have turned into something ugly for all of them.

I have only one thing to say about the ending line: OUCH!!!

Thanks again for such a great part!!

Misha
User avatar
Kathy W
Obsessed Roswellian
Posts: 690
Joined: Thu Oct 31, 2002 5:06 am

Post by Kathy W »

Hello to everyone reading! *wave*

Misha: Jaddo really needs to learn to keep at least a few of his thoughts to himself, doesn't he? (Not gonna happen. ;) ) And Valenti doesn't know when to quit. But then we already knew that from what happens to him in the future. :(

And as for Anthony......as you said in your own fanfic, "you are one hell of a perceptive woman". :mrgreen:




CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR


September 3, 1947, 2030 hours

Eagle Rock Military Base




Doctor Pierce strode through Cavitt's outer office, oblivious to the secretary who practically catapulted out of her seat to stop him. "You can't see him—he's in a meeting!" she said frantically, trying to reach the door before he did.

She failed. Ignoring her, Pierce flung the office door open to reveal Cavitt sitting at his desk, rifling through paperwork, completely alone.

"A 'meeting'?" Pierce said sarcastically, as the secretary flushed scarlet. "For your information, a 'meeting' requires more than one person, Sheridan. Talking to yourself doesn't count."

"Never mind, Harriet," Cavitt said, addressing the flustered secretary. "You tried." Harriet left as Cavitt glanced down at his watch. "Fifty minutes," he mused. "I expected you sooner. You're losing your touch."

Pierce slammed the door of the office and advanced on Cavitt, leaning his hands on his desk. "What were you thinking, knocking it out like that!" Then he straightened up, sighing. "A stupid question, I'll admit. Obviously you weren't thinking."

"On the contrary," Cavitt said, setting down his pen, "I'm thinking quite clearly. You have deliberately kept me away from the prisoner ever since your arrival here. 'It's too weak' was the first excuse, followed by 'I'm trying to establish trust'. Rubbish! When you do finally allow me access, you do so less than forty-eight hours before General Ramey's return, leaving me little leeway to deal with a hostile and arrogant subject. I'm afraid you're the one with the problem, Daniel."

Pierce sighed impatiently. "And you're the one with the memory problem. Ramey gave us specific orders that….."

"……..that it not be denied food, water, or medical care," Cavitt said firmly, "and that it not be harmed. I have done none of those things. I have followed his orders to the letter, using the one means at my disposal for influencing its behavior—the threat of sedation. Apparently it isn't very bright."

"Apparently it is," Pierce said dryly. "It managed to make you lose your temper."

"I did not lose my temper," Cavitt said irritably. "I merely presented it with a choice, just like you did: Cooperate, or pay the price. That price was made very clear. If you don't like the choice it made, you'll have to take that up with it yourself."

"That's just the point—I can't. Nobody can 'take up' anything with it because it can't talk—it's unconscious. Which, since you seem to need clarification, means that it is of no use to you or anyone else!"

" It wasn't answering my questions, so it was of no use to me anyway."

"Damn it, Sheridan! If you—"

"Oh, stop it!" Cavitt exploded, losing his temper so quickly that Pierce took a step backward. "You have reams of information, such as it is, to present day after tomorrow, and I have nothing! I have an alien ship in a hangar, and I know next to nothing about it! I have a country breathing down my neck wanting to know how that ship is powered, what weapons it possesses, what it's made of—and I can't answer them! And if I don't answer them, someone else will. I need answers, and I will get them any way I can!"

"I see," Pierce said sarcastically. "You need answers, so of course you rendered it unconscious in order to get those answers. Very smart of you. Very smart."

"It needed to see I meant business," Cavitt said shortly.

"Did you ever think of asking me? For all your disdain, I have established something of a relationship with it; Lieutenant White has had even more success. Why didn't you let us give it a try?"

Cavitt gave Pierce a pitying look. "And have to rely on you for the information that keeps me in this chair? You'd love that, wouldn't you?"

Pierce sighed. "I thought we were working toward a common goal. You agreed to be patient….."

"We are, and I am," Cavitt interrupted. "I assume you are still pursuing our 'common goal', which you know perfectly well does not require the prisoner to be conscious. I have not hounded you for details or quick success, nor have I harried Lieutenant White. And I went further. I waited for your 'permission' to interrogate the subject. I did not file complaints. I did not phone the General. Doesn't that count for something?"

"Considering that Ramey gave me the authority to decide when it was fit for interrogation……no. It doesn't. That wasn't 'patience', that was anticipation of failure."

"I don't have time for word games," Cavitt said, returning to his papers. "I have to find a way to make this meager 'evidence', and I use the term loosely, into something that will save my position. Run along and pose the prisoner nicely for our guests. That's all they'll be seeing of it."

"That's why you shot it, isn't it?" Pierce demanded. "You don't want it able to speak for itself. Or able to contradict you about your little 'meeting'."

"I didn't 'shoot' it, I 'sedated' it, and I already told you why," Cavitt said coldly. "That it can't carry on about it's supposedly benign intentions is merely a fringe benefit. Now if you'll excuse me, we both have work to do. Surely you must have some inkblots to organize?"

Fuming, Pierce flung open the office door and stalked out, not bothering to close it behind him. He wasn't going to get anywhere with Cavitt, and the damage was done, at any rate. There was nothing to be gained from an unconscious subject, either from a medical or a military viewpoint. He'd have to go directly to Ramey in order to keep this from happening again.

"Daniel! There you are!" called a voice as Pierce neared the outer office door.

Pierce turned to find Major Lewis sitting on the sofa in Cavitt's outer office, wearing his customary fake smile.

"What are you doing here, Bernard?"

"You ran out on me so fast," Lewis complained, rising to his feet. "I tried to join you, to see if I could lend a hand, of course, but the guards wouldn't let me in."

"Of course they wouldn't," Pierce said impatiently. "It'll be a cold day somewhere before I let you anywhere near the prisoner." He paused. "You put him up to this, didn't you?"

"Who? Sheridan?" Lewis asked innocently. "Gracious, I didn't have to 'put him up' to anything. Sheridan knows what needs to be done. It's you who have a problem with the necessities of life, Daniel. Do you know what your problem is?"

"Something tells me I'm about to be informed," Pierce sighed.

"Your problem is that the minute you became a doctor, you stopped thinking like a soldier," Lewis concluded, shaking his head sadly. "Most regrettable."

"And your problem is that despite your medical degree, you never started thinking like a doctor," Pierce retorted. "I'd rather perish than have you 'practice' medicine on me. Emphasis on the word 'practice'."

Lewis shrugged casually. "We merely see our roles differently. But not so differently as first appearances may suggest," he added, leaning in closer. "What do you have that I don't?"

"That's a very long list," Pierce said darkly.

"I've been after Sheridan from the beginning to help me oust you," Lewis continued, ignoring him. "Oh, I admit it," he added convivially. "I want your job. I want it badly. I know Sheridan and I see eye to eye on how things should be done here. But he won't do it; there's something he wants from you, something he thinks only you can give him."

Pierce was silent, glaring at Lewis. Cavitt knew the gist of what they were trying to do—he could spill the beans to Lewis any time he chose to. That he had not done so meant he still had an investment in their little project, that he felt Pierce was his best means of achieving the goal. For the moment, at least.

"Now, that can't be of course," Lewis went on. "There's nothing you can do that I can't. I just need to find out what you're up to, and then I can convince Sheridan that I can give him what he wants…and do it better."

"Is that why you're lurking around here like a vulture?" Pierce demanded. "Fine. Sit around and wait for your big moment. Grow moss if you want to. I have work to do."

"Of course you do," Lewis called pleasantly as Pierce headed for the door. "But I'm a patient man, Daniel. You know that. Eventually I'll get what I want. It's only a matter of time."



******************************************************



Yvonne leaned against the door to her quarters, the bag holding her laundry still warm against her back. She knew he was in there. Almost forty-five minutes had passed since Stephen had found her upstairs where she'd been doing her laundry in a vain attempt to siphon off the nervous energy that kept building as the hours ticked by and Cavitt had not emerged from John's room. She certainly hadn't expected things to go well, but she'd never expected this. And now she had the unenviable task of telling the free alien what had happened. This might be just a one time thing, a burst of temper on Cavitt's part. But if Cavitt were allowed to use sedation as an interrogation technique, the job of freeing John had just become a whole lot harder.

Reluctantly, Yvonne opened the door and slipped into her room. He was sitting in the chair in the far corner, leafing through one of her books about the Rorschach test.

<I'm afraid I must concur with my colleague,> he said, staring at one of the plates. <This is absolute nonsense.> He turned the plate sideways, causing Yvonne to smile in spite of herself.

<What?>

"Turning the plates sideways is supposedly indicative of brain damage," Yvonne told him as she set her down her laundry bag.

His eyebrows rose. <Really? I should think it would be indicative of an attempt to make sense of the nonsensical.>

"That's basically what John said when I told him that," Yvonne said, sitting down on the bed, grateful to have something other than sedated aliens to talk about for the moment. "I told him what many people see in some of the plates and suggested he use those responses, but he wasn't very amenable."

<He's rarely amenable to much anyway,> the alien observed casually, as though long used to the other's grumpiness. <Besides, it would be dangerous for him to give typical human responses.>

"Why?"

<Your superiors would no doubt find such familiarity with your world to be threatening. They would take that to mean that we are planning to invade, or something like that.>

Now, why hadn't she thought of that? If John had given the standard response to Plate #5, for example, which was either a bat or a butterfly, then people would want to know how he knew what a bat or a butterfly was. He was probably much better off giving offbeat answers; he was, after all, another species. Still, he could have just pointed all this out to her instead of getting crabby and contrary.

<I have good news,> the alien continued, turning the page to the next plate. <The technician responsible for testing the serum has become lax of late. Hopefully this will continue. The less frequently they test, the more often I will be able to replace it with something inert. My colleague's deliverance may be close at hand.>

Not if Cavitt is allowed to keep doing what he just did, Yvonne thought glumly. The whole point of replacing the serum was to let John's powers re-emerge so that he could assist in his own escape. Obviously he couldn't do that if he were unconscious.

<I should be going,> the alien announced, setting the book down. <No doubt my companion will have plenty to say about his encounter with your Major Cavitt.> He glanced at the clock on the wall. <Given the hour, he's probably hungry too. Hungry and angry. A lovely combination.> He sighed and shook his head. <Are you sure you don't want to go instead?>

He sounded so genuinely hopeful that Yvonne almost laughed. The alien never complained about his frequent visits to his friend, although he often expressed annoyance with his behavior. It hadn't occurred to her that he might dread the visits, although it certainly made sense. John could try the patience of a saint.

"I'm afraid neither of us is going," Yvonne said, staring at the floor. "Something happened."

<Is he dead?> the alien asked sharply.

"No," she answered hurriedly, "but…."

<Injured?>

"Not really…"

< 'Not really'? What does 'not really' mean?>

"I meant….."

<He went and did something stupid, didn't he?> the alien said in exasperation. <I knew it,> he fumed before she reply. <Just as I start getting close to freeing him, he went and fouled it all up, didn't he? I swear sometimes it would be easier to just leave him here! What did he do?>

<You sound just like him,> Yvonne thought wearily. <Perhaps you're more alike than you'd like to admit.>

The alien's eyes widened as Yvonne realized in horror that her unspoken thought had just gone sailing into the other's mind. She felt it leave, heard again the distinction between an ordinary thought and a…..no, not an unspoken thought. A spoken unspoken thought. An apparently uncontrollable spoken unspoken thought.

"I didn't....I mean....I didn't mean for that to reach you," she said, flushing. "I'm sorry."

<Don't be,> he said gravely. <Having you fluent in telepathic speech would be enormously helpful. But my prior experience with humans and telepathic speech suggests that its onset is driven by emotion. Chiefly fear.>

He took a step closer. <Tell me what happened.>




******************************************************




Dr. Pierce stood in the doorway of the prisoner's room, a half-empty glass of Scotch in one hand, the bottle containing the remainder in the other. "We may as well leave this open," he said to the nearest of the guards outside the door. "Air the place out a little." He sighed, staring at the prone form of the unconscious alien. "God knows we have nothing to lock in at the moment."

The guard nodded, throwing a suspicious glance toward the bottle of Scotch, which Pierce ignored. He had just finished his second phone call to General Ramey in the past hour, and given how well that had gone, he was of the considered opinion that Scotch should be elevated to the status of a food group.

Corporal Brisson, busy collecting various samples from the prisoner, looked up from his work and read his face without Pierce having to utter a word. "Bad news?"

"Take plenty of samples, Corporal," Pierce answered disconsolately. "This might be the last chance we get for awhile. And make sure you get the….."

"I've already harvested several cc's and stored them in liquid nitrogen, sir," Brisson said, nodding toward the liquid nitrogen container nearby. "We should be set for a couple of years."

"Good. We'll be able to continue that, at least."

"I take it the General wouldn't change his mind?" Brisson asked, eyeing the Scotch just like the guard had.

"He would not," Pierce said, walking further into the room, "and he made it clear that he could not change his mind even were he inclined to do so. Which he isn't."

"But he must know what's going to happen," Brisson protested. "They're not going to get what they want with the prisoner unconscious."

"Ramey knows that," Pierce said, "but the rest of them either don't, or don't care. They blame me for the total lack of military intelligence that will be quite evident day after tomorrow."

"You?" Brisson repeated. "Why you? You didn't shoot the prisoner."

"Apparently they find the Major's burst of temper easier to understand than my keeping the prisoner from him for so long, despite all of my attempts to explain why," Pierce said darkly. "My ground-breaking work on the psyche of another species is too much for their tiny little minds to contemplate. And how could I ever have expected otherwise? We're dealing with military men, not people with brains. Do you know they've given Major Lewis permission to get 'up to speed' on this operation, as they put it? That's why he's been hanging around here. The ranks of those who want me replaced are growing."

"I believe I pointed out that keeping Cavitt at bay for so long was a risk—sir," Brisson added hastily when he saw the look on Pierce's face.

"A negligible risk," Pierce retorted. "This was all supposed to be over by the time Ramey arrived, hopefully with a pile of intelligence to hand him which made the ends justify the means—or at least the prospect of such an outcome." He stared at the unconscious prisoner. "It wasn't supposed to go this way."

"Well…In a manner of speaking, I guess you could say you succeeded," Brisson said. "Perhaps a bit too well."

"Oh, yes," Pierce said sarcastically, "I was stunningly successful. So successful that I failed."

"How did you fail?" called a sharp voice behind him.

Pierce whirled around, weaving every so slightly, to find Lieutenant White standing in the doorway, her brown eyes hard. Damn, but that woman was quiet sometimes! Or perhaps the Scotch had dulled his ears. "Lieutenant," he said, attempting a smile. "Come in. I was wondering when you were going to show up." And dreading it, Pierce thought. Now he'd have to add one angry, self-righteous nurse to the list of things he had to deal with today.

Lieutenant White walked toward the bed, eyeing the prisoner intently. "What happened here?" she demanded.

"What happened here, Lieutenant, is that Major Cavitt got trigger happy," Pierce replied, sinking into a nearby chair. "No surprise there. Four darts, even though one has proven effective in the past. Apparently the Major can't count. No surprise there either. We'll be lucky if it—I mean 'he'—wakes up by Sunday."

"Was the Major attacked?"

"No," Pierce answered, chuckling slightly. "I'm afraid Major Cavitt's neck remains regrettably unbroken. You'd hear no complaints from me if that were not the case."

"He would only be replaced by another," Lieutenant White replied, "perhaps worse. If the prisoner didn't attack anyone, then why was he sedated?"

"He was sedated because Major Cavitt didn't like the answers he was getting. His solution to this problem was to knock the prisoner out cold."

"That makes no sense. Now he will get no answers of any kind."

"Logic is not always the guiding force of Major Cavitt's personality," Pierce noted, swirling his Scotch in his glass and wondering idly why she wasn't angry yet. This cool self-collectedness was unlike her.

"Did you inform your General what happened?"

" 'My' General?" Pierce said with amusement. "Unless I'm much mistaken, Lieutenant, he is every bit as much your General as mine."

"Whatever," Lieutenant White said impatiently. "This would appear to be a direct violation of his orders. Does he know?"

"Yes, he knows," Pierce sighed. "And he is in agreement. Sedation was only to be used if the prisoner became violent, which he did not, a fact I can attest to as I was watching the entire time."

"Then this will not be allowed to happen again, correct?"

"I'm afraid it's not that simple," Pierce replied, attempting to stand up and thinking better of it. Two glasses of Scotch in ten minutes was too much.

"What is wrong with you?" Lieutenant White asked, eyeing him suspiciously.

"I, my dear, am drunk," Pierce replied pleasantly, raising his glass in a mock toast.

"Drunk?"

"Yes, drunk. Soused. Sloshed. Smashed. Well-lubricated. Use whatever euphemism you want."

"This is not a good time to become inebriated," she said coldly.

"On the contrary, this is the perfect time to become inebriated," Pierce protested affably. "It's always annoying when stunning success becomes dismal failure." He sighed. "Sometimes, Lieutenant, I am just too damned smart for my own good, if I do say so myself."

She stared at him for a moment with that arch look which she sometimes used, the one that gave him the distinctly uncomfortable impression that she was reading his mind. Lieutenant White was a puzzle; at times she seemed unassuming and relatively naïve; at other times she displayed a keenness of insight he normally associated with top military officers.

As she did now. "This is your doing, isn't it?" she said flatly.

"My doing?" Pierce repeated blankly. "I assure you, my dear, I had no intention of rendering the prisoner unconscious. That was Major Cavitt's brilliant idea." He leaned forward, reaching for the bottle of Scotch, only to have it pulled from his grasp by Lieutenant White and held at arm's length.

"That's not what I meant, and you know it," she announced, holding the bottle aloft.

"It isn't? I do?"

"You kept Major Cavitt from the prisoner on purpose," she said, her eyes boring into him like drill bits. "Not just for your own pleasure, although I'm sure you derived a good deal of that from the exercise. You know Cavitt's temper—he was likely to lose it in any case, but with the added frustration of being kept away so long, and let loose at the last minute before being expected to report, you were hoping he'd misbehave. Badly enough that you could use it against him."

Pierce blinked. Sometimes the woman was so perceptive it was downright disturbing. "Close, but no cigar, Lieutenant," he said pleasantly. "Now give me my Scotch." He reached for the bottle, only to have it moved further away.

"Answer me," Lieutenant White demanded.

Pierce eyed her warily, keeping one eye on the hovering Scotch. It probably wouldn't hurt to explain, at least up to a point. It was all over now anyway. "Very well then. You're half right—I was hoping Major Cavitt would do something stupid, which, based on his previous behavior, was not at all a vain hope. And he obliged me, with behavior so ineffably stupid that it redefines the word."

"And?" she prompted.

"The idea was that Major Cavitt would behave badly, the prisoner would become angry with him, and then....and then I would step in with a proposal for our friend here which would virtually guarantee he need never deal with Major Cavitt again. That proposal, I'm sorry to say, requires him to be conscious….and cooperative. Cooperation was always going to be hard to come by, but now I'm afraid it's impossible, consciousness being a prerequisite to cooperation, even for aliens."

"So," Lieutenant White said coldly, "your attempt to manipulate matters ended with the Major behaving more badly than even you had anticipated, and now you can't make your 'proposal' until the prisoner reawakens. Why is this a problem?"

Pierce shook his head sadly. "Unfortunately I underestimated the relative impatience of those in command and the pressure they would bring to bear on General Ramey."

"Explain."

"Then do I get my Scotch back?"

"Explain."

Pierce sighed. "My keeping Cavitt from the prisoner resulted in no military information being funneled upward. I was expecting that, counting on it even. I figured I had two months at least before the fur began to fly. Unfortunately, I miscalculated. Badly. The pressure on the General has led him to a decision which makes that"—he pointed to the still hovering bottle of Scotch in her hand—"quite soothing at the moment."

"What decision?" Lieutenant White asked, still holding the Scotch hostage.

"General Ramey has agreed that Major Cavitt can't just go around shooting the prisoner any time he likes, but he has also agreed that incentives can be applied if he refuses to cooperate. Therefore, the General has authorized the use of solitary confinement as a means of motivation."

"The very same tactic you used," Lieutenant White reminded him.

"Yes. Quite," Pierce answered soberly. "Hoisted by my own petard. In theory, Ramey sees this being used only if the prisoner refuses to speak at all, but in practice we both know what's going to happen. Unless Major Cavitt hears what he wants, which most likely involves something about an invading fleet of spaceships hiding behind the moon and powering up their ray guns, he will slap the prisoner into solitary, which means that no one will have access to him—including you. And judging by his previous reaction to that technique and the frequency with which Major Cavitt will apply it now that he's been given free rein, someone's neck will no doubt be broken in short order, in which case the Major will be free to sedate the prisoner, rendering him even more useless. This cycle will repeat itself until those who contend the alien was too dangerous to keep in the first place finally win the day and have him executed."

"That must not be allowed to happen," Lieutenant White said firmly. She stared at the prisoner for a moment, then turned her attention back to Pierce. "Revive him, make your 'proposal', and I will see to it that he accepts."

Pierce smiled indulgently. "But I never told you what my proposal was, Lieutenant."

The Lieutenant's eyebrows rose. "You are undoubtedly one of the more conniving people I've met, Doctor, but you really do need to work on your transparency. I divined your intentions several minutes ago. Revive him, and I will do the rest."

"Lieutenant, are you sure it isn't you who's been hitting the Scotch?" Pierce asked incredulously. "I'm not sure I can revive him in time. I only have experience with the use of sedatives on these creatures, not stimulants. I could kill him if I proceed too hastily."

"This species requires at least twice as much sedative as humans do. Might they not also require twice as much stimulant?"

"Quite possibly," Pierce allowed, "but there's no way to know for certain. And that's only half the battle. Let's say, for the sake of argument, that I am able to revive him in time. Then what? It would likely have taken me days to get the point across—you'll have hours, if not minutes, and that's best case. I'm afraid you overestimate your affect on him, Lieutenant. Granted, he has responded better to you than to anyone else, and I'm grateful for your assistance, but he barely speaks to you. He barely speaks to anyone. How do you……."

Lieutenant White abruptly leaned forward, her hands resting on the arms of his chair, her nose only inches from his. "We need to attack Major Cavitt now," she said, her eyes turning to flint. "There may never be a better time. He has just made an obvious error in judgment, and we should exploit that to its fullest. If we should fail, and the prisoner is not revived by the time the General arrives, he is likely dead anyway—or as good as. At the very least, you will lose control of him. Is that what you want? What have you got to lose by trying?"

Pierce stared at her in astonishment. Crazy as it seemed, she had a point: Although few in the upper echelons were likely to spare any tears for an alien, especially a belligerent one like this, Cavitt had seriously overstepped his bounds. If he were able to revive it……if she were able to win its cooperation in less time than it would have taken him…..oh, that would be sweet. And if she failed? Well, if she failed, at least he would be no worse off than he was now.

"You surprise me, Lieutenant," Pierce said, setting down his empty glass. "There are times you appear every bit as 'conniving' as you claim I am."

"As I have previously noted, you know very little about me," she said coolly. "Will you require my assistance in reviving him?"

"Yes....but not immediately. I need to do some research first, look over my notes, make some calculations. I'll call you when I'm ready."

"Make it soon," she warned, and turned and walked out the door. A long minute passed before Pierce spoke again.

"Corporal," he said to a stunned Brisson, "what just happened?"

"I….I'm not sure," Brisson said uncertainly. "But if we can wake it up in time, she just might pull it off. She did manage to get it to eat after we captured it, and it does seem to enjoy her company."

"As much as it enjoys anything," Pierce said dryly. "I can't figure her out. Sometimes she is so quiet, and just now she sounded….." He stopped, searching for the right word. "She sounded predatory."

"Well, she is very protective of it," Brisson noted, staring at the prone figure of the alien, which looked far more friendly now that it was out cold. "Perhaps we're looking at a kind of……mother instinct?"

"I don't care what the hell it is as long as it works," Pierce announced, rising to his feet, suddenly sober. "Finish what you're doing, then join me."

"Yes, doctor," Brisson answered, looking wistfully at the door through which Lieutenant White had just left. "It really is too bad we're going to lose her."

Pierce stopped. "Lose her?"

Brisson dropped his eyes back to his work and didn't answer.

"Corporal, we have no evidence that what we are attempting will harm Lieutenant White. And you've seen for yourself that she can be a hard-nosed, practical scientist. Extremely hard nosed. I'm sure she would approve."

"Of course, doctor," Brisson answered, sounding unconvinced.

"You have been collecting the data, haven't you?"

"Yes, doctor," Brisson said, avoiding Pierce's gaze. "I found an easier way. Lieutenant White keeps careful notes on the calendar in her desk."

"Excellent," Pierce said. He paused. "You're not going soft on me, are you Brisson?"

"Of course not, Doctor."

"Good. One can't be soft in times like these. I'll be in the lab, finishing my—damn!" he exclaimed, looking around, empty glass in hand.

"What is it?" Brisson asked.

"She took my Scotch!"



******************************************************



Lieutenant Spade grabbed a mug off the shelf, poured himself a cup of coffee, and headed for the table furthest from the door. Thankfully the mess hall was quieter than the recreation room, which was currently jammed with jubilant soldiers, thrilled that their commander had finally "shown the alien who was boss". And here he'd thought everyone had acquired a bit of perspective in the past few weeks. Even Walker had become somewhat less belligerent, with the emphasis on the word "somewhat". But apparently that new calm had been deceptive, masking a deep-seated resentment that was now bubbling to the surface.

The irony was that most of the sources of that resentment had little to do with the alien himself. Spade had grown more and more uneasy as the days had ticked by and Cavitt had shown no sign of loosening the leash around the men's necks. The lockdown continued; no one but Cavitt, Pierce, and a handful of others were allowed outside, never mind off the base, and everyone's mail was still censored, their families still convinced they were elsewhere. Most of the men merely rotated through guard duty with nothing but the meager pursuits available in the rec room to amuse themselves when off duty. They had taken to blaming the alien for their predicament because he was a safe target; the real source of their misery, that being Major Cavitt's iron hand and perpetual distrust of his own men, went unnoticed. Cavitt did have a point that minimizing the number of personnel allowed in and out of the compound would minimize the chances of an alien slipping inside, but Spade knew that wasn't the real reason for the lockdown; if it were, then no one would be allowed out. No, what Cavitt was also afraid of was that someone would talk or go AWOL, and he intended to see that didn't happen.

Another roar of merriment erupted from the rec room, and Spade was once again grateful that he'd managed to get to Yvonne first, before she was treated to the whooping and hollering and general rejoicing which would have announced events to her otherwise. She hadn't been able to have dinner with the alien as usual because he was locked up with Cavitt, so she'd been doing her laundry in the laundry room a few doors down when he'd caught up with her, closing the door behind him and locking it so they could talk privately. Being seen together too often was problematic. Both he and Yvonne were regarded resentfully by many of the men, who felt they had too much sympathy for the alien, so it didn't help if people constantly saw the two of them together. It was hard not having anyone to talk to, but whenever he was feeling lonely, he reminded himself that it was worse for her: At least he wasn't the only man here.

Locking the laundry room door had bought them about ten minutes before someone else had appeared, at which time Spade had cut their conversation short and headed here, looking for coffee and a little peace. Of course he could always go to his quarters, but those four walls were looking mighty close these days. His men weren't the only ones feeling claustrophobic.

"Sir?"

Spade set his cup down and resisted the urge to sigh. So much for peace. Now he'd be peppered with questions about why he wasn't celebrating along with everyone else. So he was pleasantly surprised to find Private Thompson standing there holding a tray of dinner, the same Thompson who had gone out of his way to complement him for speaking up about the alien who had surrendered.

"May I join you, sir?"

"Sure. Have a seat," Spade said, indicating the chair across from him. "I'm surprised you're not enjoying the festivities in the other room."

Thompson's eyes flicked up. "I don't feel much like celebrating, sir."

"Neither do I," Spade admitted. "But I'd wager we're in the minority."

Thompson began cutting his meat, then abruptly set his utensils down. "I guess I don't feel much like eating either, sir."

Spade gave him a measuring stare. He didn't know Thompson well, but he'd always seemed the decent sort, the type who would hear you out before passing judgment. He was also one of the guards Cavitt had taken with him into the interrogation, so he was likely one of the guards who had shot the prisoner. No wonder he looked disturbed.

"Something on your mind, Private?"

Thompson hesitated, as if weighing a decision. "Sir," he said finally, "can I asked you something?"

"Of course."

"What are the odds that I'd be able to get transferred out of here?"

"How low can you count in negative numbers?"

Thompson's shoulders sagged a bit, but he didn't look too surprised. "I was afraid of that," he said quietly. "In that case……" He took a folded piece of paper out of his pocket and silently handed it to Spade, who skimmed it briefly.

"This is a letter of resignation."

"Yes, sir."

"Thompson……"

"I can resign, sir," Thompson interrupted. "My tour of duty ends in three weeks."

Spade read more of the letter, shaking his head as he did so. It was full of very good reasons why Thompson felt the Army wasn't handling the whole alien business properly. Very good reasons that would probably make him wind up like West and Belmont.

"I can't accept this," Spade, pushing it back across the table.

"But…you have to!" Thompson insisted. "There's no draft now, sir, and my tour is up. The Army can't hold me unless we're in a combat situation, and we haven't declared war on these people. Which is just as well, because I'm pretty sure we'd lose."

"The usual rules won't apply in this situation," Spade said with certainty.

Thompson stared at him blankly for a moment, still not comprehending the quicksand he'd stumbled into. Finally he leaned forward and blurted, "Sir, I can't do this anymore! Today I was ordered to fire on a prisoner not because it was threatening anyone or trying to escape, but just because Major Cavitt didn't like the answers he was getting! That's an illegal order. And you should hear what else is going on. I overheard Major Cavitt and Major Lewis talking the other day, and the things they were saying…." Thompson swallowed hard, and shook his head. "Let's just say that Lewis's middle name must be 'Mengele'. We have a right to protect ourselves, but we don't have a right to act like the Nazis did. The Geneva Convention…….."

"Doesn't apply here," Spade interrupted, having already gone down this path. "The Convention draws a line between enemy combatants and civilians and tries to protect both. No one's going to buy the alien being a civilian, and he doesn't fit the criteria for an enemy combatant either—he wasn't wearing a uniform or fighting with any known military force. There aren't any rules for this situation."

"No rules?" Thompson said faintly, his expression one of a man who suddenly finds himself adrift in a rowboat in the middle of the Atlantic. "What does that mean, sir?"

"What that means is that those who feel hemmed in by Geneva, like Major Lewis and Major Cavitt, will have a field day," Spade said grimly. "Unless someone reins them in. I think General Ramey will try; he seems like a good man. But he won't be able to use Geneva to justify it because nobody's going to believe Geneva applies to aliens."

"I do, sir."

"So do I," Spade allowed. "But nobody cares about our opinions, Private. There aren't any rules out there for aliens, just like there aren't any rules for soldiers guarding them that the brass won't be willing to ignore."

"That's where you're wrong," Thompson said firmly. "Maybe the Geneva Conventions don't apply in this case, but there's been no change in the Army's rules. The Army has to follow its own regulations regarding its own men. If you won't accept my resignation, I'll take it directly to Major Cavitt."

"No!" Spade said suddenly, glancing quickly around. There was no one else in the mess hall, but that could change at any moment. "Don't take it to Cavitt. That's the worst thing you could do."

"Why not? I'm just following procedure by turning it in first to my immediate superior. He's the one who would ultimately rubber stamp it."

"Oh, he'll rubber stamp it, all right," Spade said darkly, his voice so low he was practically whispering. "But not the way you think. Don't do it, Thompson. It's not safe."

"Safe?" Thompson repeated, lowering his voice to match Spade's. "What are you talking about? Oh," he said suddenly, his eyes widening. "I get it. You're afraid that they'll come after me. The aliens," he clarified in a whisper. "Like they went after Private West and that other guy."

Spade hesitated. How much should he tell him? The last thing he wanted was for someone else to die because of all this nonsense, and he was very much afraid that's exactly what would happen if Cavitt got wind of this. Oh, he wouldn't go the fake handprint route again—he'd already used that once. No, this time it would be an unfortunate accident. Or a court martial on some trumped up charge to make certain Thompson got put away for good.

Thompson was staring at him, waiting for an answer. He had no idea what he was dealing with, and why would he? Everyone else thought that West and Belmont had been murdered by aliens out of revenge; there was no reason to think differently. Perhaps it was time to change that. Of all the soldiers stationed here, Thompson was the most likely to give him a fair hearing. And it would be wonderful to have someone else on their side, another set of eyes, ears, and willing hands. But the depth of Spade and Yvonne's involvement was so great that he had to be very careful; reveal too much to the wrong set of ears, and it would be he or Yvonne or both who would pay for it.

"Aliens didn't kill West and Belmont," Spade said quietly.

Thompson looked confused. "Sir?"

"You heard me. I said aliens didn't kill West and Belmont."

"But…..the handprints….."

"Were fake. Silver paint. I touched them myself."

"But….." Thompson's face almost contorted, he was working so hard to process this new information. "…..if aliens didn't kill them…….who did?"

"I'm not sure," Spade admitted. "All I know is that they were killed by someone who wanted it to look like aliens were responsible. Think, Private. Who around here would want to make the aliens look more threatening?"

Spade fell silent, nursing his coffee. Thompson's uneaten tray of food lay cold and forgotten as the implications of this question slowly sank in. Spade remembered how he'd felt the night he'd touched the cold bodies of his friends, how the paint had come off on his hand and he hadn't wanted to believe it, had rebelled against believing it. It would be harder for Thompson—he didn't have the proof staring him in the face.

"Sir," Thompson whispered, with a furtive look toward the door, "do you have any idea what you're saying?"

"I have every idea what I'm saying, Private. They didn't let me in the room with the bodies when they showed them to me through the morgue window, but Cavitt was in there, along with the two doctors who worked on the two dead aliens. They must have known it was paint. I figured that out myself in thirty seconds flat when I snuck into the morgue and looked at the bodies up close."

"But…but why?" Thompson asked. "Why….why murder two of our own people when the aliens had already killed several anyway? What possible good would that do?"

"It made me cooperate," Spade said, feeling the heat rise in his face the way it always did when he was reminded of the fact that all of them were in this debacle because of him. "Their deaths convinced me to help Cavitt lay a trap for the aliens. And Cavitt had another problem—I was out there telling a very different version of what happened inside that ship, and I wasn't backing down. That alien surrendered, Private….surrendered. I saw it. West saw it. He was bawling like a baby when he realized what he'd done. He might've talked had he lived, despite that fake confession Cavitt got him to sign. And that's not what Cavitt wanted. He didn't want a surrendering alien, he wanted a dangerous alien. He wanted to make them look worse than they are."

As if on cue, a loud cheer wafted through the door, coming from the rec room where people were still celebrating the alien being shot. "And it worked," Spade concluded softly, nodding toward the door.

Thompson fell silent again, staring in the direction of the sounds of merriment, elbows propped on the table, his hands furiously clasping and unclasping. "Okay, so you think…..he did it," Thompson said, unwilling to actually say Cavitt's name out loud. "Did you tell anyone what you found?"

"The only one to tell was the very person I suspected of arranging it in the first place," Spade said. "And now the bodies are gone, and the two doctors died the night the first alien was captured. The only one left is Cavitt."

"The doctors are dead because aliens killed them, sir," Thompson pointed out.

"The doctors are dead because we took things that didn't belong to us," Spade said firmly, "even though we were never under attack, never threatened in any way. I was there when we found the ship—we struck first. And when that alien tried to surrender to me, he wound up dead anyway, accused of attacking me, and that's not what happened. Can you blame them for what they've done? Would we have done any different were we in their shoes? They're people. They may be different than us, but they're still people. Somewhere along the way, we forgot that. Or maybe some of us never figured it out in the first place."

"Whoa! Wait a minute," Thompson protested. "I don't like what's going on here any more than you do, and if what you say is true about…..him…..then that's the most despicable thing I've ever heard, and he should pay for that. But calling those things 'people'? Like us? That's a leap I'm not willing to make. What if Cavitt's right? What if they are preparing to attack us?"

Spade sighed and set down his now empty coffee cup. "In that case, we're screwed. You said it yourself—we couldn't win a conflict with these people. They're way more advanced than we are. If they're planning to attack us, our only hope is to win them over, to make friends of them. How do you think we're doing?"

Thompson didn't answer. He looked away, out the window, his hands still fidgeting. After a minute or two, Spade pushed the letter across the table.

"I won't accept this," he said firmly. "I won't sign your death warrant. Whoever killed West and Belmont is probably still out there, and if they were willing to kill once, it's a good bet they'd kill again. You submit this resignation and you'll leave, all right—feet first. If you want to go over my head, I can't stop you, but I won't have the consequences on my conscience."

Swallowing hard, Thompson reached across the table and picked up the letter. He started to rise, then sat down again, staring at Spade.

"There's more, isn't there sir."

"More?"

"Yeah....more. Like what really happened the night the aliens kidnapped you. And what made you suspect that aliens didn't kill West and Belmont. And…." Thompson hesitated, as if unsure how far to go. "And why you ordered us to hold our fire when the first one escaped."

Spade regarded him levelly, mentally approving of the speed with which Thompson had put it all together despite his shock. It would be wonderful to have him on their side. But Thompson was in a dangerous place right now; he could easily tip either way, and Spade had no proof to aid in tipping him in the right direction. It was too soon to say more.

"I think you're heard enough for one night, Private," Spade said. "If the time comes when you want to hear more, let me know."

"All right," Thompson said, nodding slowly. "I'll keep that in mind, sir." He nodded to Spade and left the room wordlessly, his food still untouched, the sounds of cheers from the rec room wreathing his exit. And Spade watched him go, wondering if instead of signing Thompson's death warrant, he'd just signed his own.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I'll post Chapter 35 next Sunday. :)
BRIVARI: "In our language, the root of the word 'Covari' means 'hidden'. I'm always there, Your Highness, even if you don't see me."
Locked